Correction: All the Children Are NOT Above Average

by Robert Pondiscio
July 29th, 2010

All across New York, parents awoke this morning to learn their kids were maybe not quite as smart as they were led to believe.

The Kids Are All Right

by Robert Pondiscio
July 29th, 2010

Large foundations “enamored by the romance of gritty urban schools” are failing to distinguish between low-performing urban schools and effective ones, writes Larry Cuban.   Most U.S. schools meet parental demands, have low dropout rates, and send over 90 percent of their graduates to college.

Ignored is the fact that there is a three-tiered system of schooling in the U.S.  The top two tiers (which over half of U.S. students attend) are considered by most parents to be either good or good enough for their children. In the third tier, however, big city and rural schools enrolling mostly poor and minority students have largely failed to educate children and youth. Surely, the three tiered system is obvious for anyone with 20/20 vision living in Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, and other metropolitan areas, particularly to parents who shop around for schools to send their children.

Cuban has a point.  Think of your friends and colleagues who are not in education. How many think their children are trapped in a failing school?  ”Such a mindless mistake propagates misinformation and sustains a ‘crisis’ mentality that continually bashes teachers and undermines trust in public schools,” Cuban writes.  

I’m not among those who thinks the education crisis is manufactured.  There certainly is a crisis in urban schools.  But Cuban’s point is worth remembering for policymakers and pundits.  The goal is supposed to be to get those “third-tier” schools to function more like the good ones, not the other way around.

Math Quiz

by Robert Pondiscio
July 28th, 2010

Did you hear the one about how relying on test score data for teacher evaluation results in a high likelihood of teachers being misclassified as high or low performing?   Nah, didn’t think so.  The NCEE report, released this week, says:

“If only three years of data are used for estimation (the amount of data typically used in practice), Type I and II errors for teacher-level analyses will be about 26 percent each. This means that in a typical performance measurement system, 1 in 4 teachers who are truly average in performance will be erroneously identified for [rewards or sanctions], and 1 in 4 teachers who differ from average performance by 3 to 4 months of student learning will be overlooked.

Today’s quiz:  How many times does four go into 241?  Express your answer to the nearest teacher.

The $320,000 Kindergarten Teacher

by Robert Pondiscio
July 28th, 2010

An intriguing new study suggests that while the effects of a high quality preschool program seem to fade out after a few years, they may re-emerge spectacularly later in life.  The study by Harvard economist Raj Chetty and several colleagues is written up in the New York Times under the attention-grabbing headline “The Case for $320,000 Kindergarten Teachers.”  The large-scale study looked at the life outcomes of 12,000 children who had been part of an education experiment in Tennessee in the 1980s.

“Just as in other studies, the Tennessee experiment found that some teachers were able to help students learn vastly more than other teachers. And just as in other studies, the effect largely disappeared by junior high, based on test scores. Yet when Mr. Chetty and his colleagues took another look at the students in adulthood, they discovered that the legacy of kindergarten had re-emerged. Students who had learned much more in kindergarten were more likely to go to college than students with otherwise similar backgrounds. Students who learned more were also less likely to become single parents. As adults, they were more likely to be saving for retirement. Perhaps most striking, they were earning more.”

The economists don’t pretend to know the exact causes. “But it’s not hard to come up with plausible guesses,” Leonhardt notes.  ”Good early education can impart skills that last a lifetime — patience, discipline, manners, perseverance. The tests that 5-year-olds take may pick up these skills, even if later multiple-choice tests do not.”

It’s a fascinating study and thesis, but consider this is not a case of something new under the sun.  The well-known Perry Preschool study showed similar effects albeit with a much smaller sample size.   The lives of 128 African-Americans were studied beginning with their preschool years in Michigan in the mid-1960s.  By the time they reached middle age, those who attended a high-quality preschool program earned more, were more likely to be employed, had fewer arrests, and were more likely to have graduated high school than those who did not.

The new Tennessee study shows similar effects, including higher earnings.  “All else equal,” writes the Times’ David Leonhardt, they were making about an extra $100 a year at age 27 for every percentile they had moved up the test-score distribution over the course of kindergarten.”

It’s the all else equal part that always undoes me.  All else is seldom equal given the limitless differences in inputs, interests and experience among even those with superficially similar lives.  Indeed, it strains the imagination to think that even the best kindergarten teacher can implant the traits of patience, discipline, manners, and perseverance so firmly into a five-year-old  that they persist for life.  It seems much more likely that children with those characteristics are more likely to thrive in an environment that recognizes and nourishes them.  Drop a seed into fertile ground and it will sprout.  Drop the same seed into dry sand and nothing will happen.  Coaxing that seed to sprout is clearly the first step, not the only one. This doesn’t diminish one’s appreciation for the skills of a great teacher–creating a positive, nurturing classroom environment is clearly a prerequisite for all other accomplishments.  But trying to point to a teacher as the prime mover shows a dogged and even simplistic determination to find the One True Factor upon which all others pivot.  It is entirely likely that noncognitive traits are more malleable than general intelligence, and more responsive to early intervention.  But common sense would suggest those traits still need to be reinforced and nurtured throughout childhood, by the majority of adults with whom a child comes in contact. 

One other question the study raises:  if perseverance, self-control and curiosity are the keys to life success, then why does improving those traits not lead to a measurable improvement in standardized test scores  at every step of a child’s academic career? 

The study has yet to be peer reviewed, and will no doubt be closely examined. Meanwhile, the idea of paying even the best early childhood educators north of a quarter of a million dollars a year is clearly fanciful.  Even if the study is unimpeachable, it’s impossible to know who these life-changing educators will be.  We can only identify them in retrospect, if at all.

And Then There Were Nineteen…

by Robert Pondiscio
July 27th, 2010

Race to the Top round two finalists have been announced: Arizona, California, Colorado, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and South Carolina.

Instant analysis at EdWeek’s Politics K-12 blog.

Kindergarten-Ready Standards? Try Parenting PSAs Instead.

by Robert Pondiscio
July 27th, 2010

When I was a kid, my family would drive frequently to Yonkers, NY to visit my grandparents.  Along Long Island’s Northern State Parkway, there was always an enormous amount of trash on the side of the road.  People thought nothing of rolling down the window and tossing trash from moving cars.

If that strikes you a bizarre, selfish or just plain disgusting, thank the “Crying Indian.”  One of the most effective television commercials ever, the Crying Indian was the centerpiece of a long-running public service campaign from Keep America Beautiful.  The anti-pollution campaign changed behavior.   It drove awareness of the problem of litter, and fed a growing environmental consciousness in the U.S.

<a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=j7OHG7tHrNM">http://youtube.com/watch?v=j7OHG7tHrNM</a>

People did a lot of things when I was growing up in the 60s and 70s that are now considered socially unacceptable:  women smoked while pregnant.  Parents smoked in front of their kids.  Drinking and driving.  Not wearing seatbelts.  From buying war bonds to fighting child abuse, public service messages have a long history of changing behaviors and our definition of what is or is not acceptable.  Perhaps we need to revisit this tradition.

In an Education Week essay, Elanna S. Yalow, executive vice president of Knowledge Universe, argues that educators, lawmakers and parents must create “common standards for early-childhood learning.”

Although “kindergarten ready” may not have the same cachet as “college- and career-ready,” early learning is the cornerstone of long-term success for America’s children. After all, learning starts at birth, and learning standards should start with even our youngest children….Without early-learning standards and quality pre-K education programs to support them, the developmental gaps start and expand even before children enter kindergarten.”

Rather than get standards-happy, I’d rather see an aggressive public awareness campaign that carries the message that a child’s success in school is largely driven by what happens before that child sets foot in school on Day One, and gives parents a few things they can do to get their child ready from the start.  Here are a few ideas off the top of my head. 

1. Read to your child for 30 minutes a day.
2. Have conversations with your child every day.  Use questions, not commands.
3. Teach your child the alphabet before kindergarten.
4. Teach your child to count to 20.
5. Limit TV time to 30 minutes a day.

Rather than try to parent-proof children with “early childhood learning standards,” perhaps we’d be better off sharing the habits of good parenting broadly, aggressively and publicly.  Behaviors change when people see the benefit of changing.  Isn’t that what education is all about? It works.  If you need proof, just look on the side of the road.

Update:  Joanne Jacobs has more on this.   ”Kindergarten preparedness training is a regimen with an ancient history,” comments reader Obi-Wandreas.  “In some more primitive areas it is still referred to by its archaic designation of ‘parenting.’”

Group Work: It Even Stops Bullies!

by Robert Pondiscio
July 26th, 2010

How do you stop a bully?  “Punch him in the nose,” Dad says.  “Ignore him and he’ll go away,” counsels Mom.   Not hardly.   There’s only one way to stop a bully and that’s…cooperative learning?

“As an essential part of the school curriculum, we have to teach children how to be good to one another, how to cooperate, how to defend someone who is being picked on and how to stand up for what is right,” say Susan Engel and Marlene Sandstrom of Williams College.  Weighing in on a Massachusetts law that mandates an anti-bullying curriculum, and requires schools to report serious cases to police, Engel and Sandstrom say a sense of responsibility for the well-being of others should be “an essential criterion” for what it means to be well-educated. “Children need to know that adults consider kindness and collaboration to be every bit as important as algebra and reading,” they write in a New York Times op-ed.

“In groups and one-on-one sessions, students and teachers should be having conversations about relationships every day….Teachers also need to structure learning activities in which children are interdependent and can learn to view individual differences as unique sources of strength. It’s vital that every student, not just the few who sign up for special projects or afterschool activities, be involved in endeavors that draw them together.”

Look at Norway, they say, where everyone from teachers to janitors to bus drivers are trained to spot bullying and how to intervene.  “Clearly, when a school and a community adopt values that are rooted in treating others with dignity and respect, children’s behavior can change,” write Engel and Sandstrom.

Katharine Beals plays Kumbaya Killer.  The author of Raising a Left-Brain Child in a Right-Brain World writes on her blog: “What’s egregiously missing from this Norwegian comparison is any mention of Norwegian school children working cooperatively on academic assignments.”

“The anecdotes I collected for my book strongly suggest that group learning environments, rather than preventing bullying, are often arenas for it. Bullying can be quite subtle and difficult to detect; teachers cannot supervise multiple groups simultaneously; unsocial and socially awkward children regularly report being teased and ignored as the social hierarchy of the playground creeps into the classroom’s “cooperative groups”–whenever the teacher is out of earshot.

Beals is impatient with those who “never stray within earshot of children who are supposed to be working together” in K-12 classrooms.  Instead, says Beals they “happily write Op-Ed pieces about how wonderfully these groups promote social harmony so long as they are ‘properly implemented.’”

Group work has become the ShamWow of education.  It raises test scores!  It teaches 21st Century Skills!  It even stops bullying!  It’s becoming the reason to go to school in the first place.  I’m fine with group work when it suits the content of the lesson, but I don’t care for the all group work, all the time orthodoxy.  And I’m skeptical that it’s a panacea for all that ails our schools—academic or social.

Nation Touches Third Rail, Survives

by Robert Pondiscio
July 23rd, 2010

Despite the adoption of Common Core State Standards by more than half the states in the nation, the sky remains firmly in place, impervious to the coordinated attack.   Secretary of Education Arne Duncan has declared himself “ecstatic” at the adoption rate telling the New York Times, “This been the third rail of education, and the fact that you’re now seeing half the nation decide that it’s the right thing to do is a game-changer.”

Game-evolver, perhaps, as even CCSS supporters are quick to point out.  At Public School Insights, Claus Von Zastrow writes that high standards will mean little “if the tests are no good, the curriculum is weak, and schools have little or no support to make standards mean something in the classroom.”  The Minister of Propaganda for the education status quo thus finds himself under the same big tent as Checker Finn and Mike Petrilli at Fordham.  Even conservatives love the Common Core Standards, they note at National Review Online, with its call for students to memorize their times tables, learn phonics, and understand the country’s founding documents:

“Anxiety will surely rise when school kids across the land begin (three or four years hence) to take tests linked to these standards, and even more when those test results start to determine promotion from fifth to sixth grade or graduation from high school. (The development of those tests will soon start, aided by $350 million of federal stimulus funds.) But without tests and results-based accountability, along with solid curricula, quality textbooks, and competent teaching, standards alone have no traction in real classrooms. Adopting good standards is like having a goal for your cholesterol; it doesn’t mean you will actually eat a healthy diet or live longer.”

Right.  Critics argue that standards don’t educate children.  Right again.  The true test remains implementation.  For elementary education, the principal benefit of the CCSS is the recognition that verbal achievement is based on general knowledge, and the explicit call for instruction in language arts to include all key academic domains and be integrated with a content-rich curriculum.  Is that a guarantee it will happen?  Of course not.  Even under a single standard, the states that fare the best will be the ones with the best trained teachers and the most thoughtful, rigorous curriculum.

Hey! That sounds like a real race to the top.

10 Things for Gates and Broad to Think About

by Robert Pondiscio
July 22nd, 2010

 ”We don’t know anything about how to teach or reading curriculum or any of that.  But what we do know about is management and governance.”  Education uber-philanthropist Eli Broad in “Bill Gates’ School Crusade,” in the July 15 issue of BusinessWeek. 

1. The Edsel. 
2. Betamax. 
3. New Coke.
4. MC Hammer.
5. The XFL. 
6. Pets.com.  
7. Polaroid. 
8. Ishtar.
9. Segway.
10. Microsoft Vista

Sometimes, even in business, the problem isn’t management.  Sometimes, the problem is the product.

I’m just sayin’…

“Clearly Inferior” Yardsticks

by Robert Pondiscio
July 21st, 2010

Important and compelling report from Fordham comparing our current ramshackle collection of state standards to the Common Core State Standards.  The essential question: Would replacing any given state’s math and ELA standards with CCSS be a step forward, back or no difference?  The upshot, per Fordham’s Education Gadfly:

Common Core State Standards Initiative are clearer and more rigorous than today’s ELA standards in 37 states and today’s math standards in 39 states….In 33 of those states, the Common Core bests both ELA and math standards. Yet California, Indiana and the District of Columbia have ELA standards that are clearly superior to those of the Common Core. And nearly a dozen states have ELA or math standards  in the same league as  Common Core. 

At Fordham’s Flypaper blog, Mike Petrilli sensibly points out the states that have already adopted the Common Core are moving from “clearly inferior” standards to something much better. “As a result, the national average for state standards has already gone from a “C” for both math and English (pre-Common Core adoption) to a B-plus for math and a B for English, now that these states have switched standards. In just the last month or so, America has raised the bar by at least a letter grade, from mediocre to very good standards,” he writes. 

More on CCSS and the Fordham report from Joanne Jacobs and Eduflack.  The New York Times has a debate on national standards with a collection of big thinkers, and Alfie Kohn.