Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Obama & Education: Faulty Assumptions, Based on "Wrong" Data


I've admired Gerald Bracey's work in and around the field of education policy analysis and criticism for close on 25 years. He's been overwhelmingly correct about 95% of the time, and I cannot even remember the exceptions. Here, via Susan Ohanian's vital and necessary blog, he addresses a dilemma "thePrez" might have to confront, if he were actually honest about his education positions:
On Education, the Obama Administration Veers Off Course

by Gerald Bracey (Huffington Post, 2009-05-11)

How can the Obama administration get it right in education when its data are all wrong and its assumptions about its faulty data are flawed?

President Obama told the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, "8th graders have fallen to 9th place." That statistic comes from the 2008 round of the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study. It's true. But there were 45 nations in the study so being in 9th place means being ahead of 36. More important, when TIMSS first began in 1995, American eighth graders finished 28th among 41 nations. Over 13 years, we have "fallen" up 19 ranks. Many would consider that extraordinary progress.

The President also said, "Only one third of our thirteen- and fourteen-year olds are reading as well as they should." This is a finding from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP). NAEP reports results in terms of the percent attaining the Basic, Proficient, and Advanced levels. It is true that only about one third of American 13- and 14-year olds reach the Proficient level. Is this awful? One study asked, How many students in other countries would reach this level? The answer for Sweden was, about one third. Sweden scored higher than any of the other 35 nations in the study.

Another investigation asked the same question about NAEP math and science in 45 countries. Only five nations would have small majorities of their students scoring at the Proficient level in mathematics and only two would clear that barrier in science. "Proficient," as defined by NAEP, is something that very few students in any country can attain.

NAEP data distort our perceptions of achievement. We can see this from a recent study from the U. S Department of Education wherein 80% of high school seniors who scored at the NAEP Basic level in mathematics attended 2- or 4-year institutions of higher education. School critics and the public interpret "Basic" as "illiterate" in reading and "can't calculate" in math. Yet 49 percent of the students scoring at the Basic level attained a bachelor's degree and another 9 percent received an associate's degree. The NAEP achievement levels do not reflect the true achievement of American students.

According to the President, "Of the 30 fastest growing occupations in America, half require a bachelor's degree or more." First off, that means that half do not require even a bachelor's. More important, the fastest growing occupations never account for many jobs. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the occupations accounting for most jobs are low-paying service sector jobs. Retail sales alone accounts for more jobs than the top ten fastest growing jobs combined. For every systems analyst Microsoft lusts after, Wal-Mart and other retailers put about 15 sales associates on the floor.

Here are the occupations the Bureau projected as those with the most jobs from 2006 to 2016: retail sales, cashiers, office clerks, registered nurses, janitors and cleaners, bookkeeping clerks, waiters and waitresses, food preparers and servers, customer service representatives, and truck and tractor drivers. Shouldn't we focus at least in part on providing these tens of millions with living wages and health benefits?

Turning his attention to standards, the President contended, "Today's system of fifty different benchmarks for academic success means fourth-graders in Mississippi are scoring nearly 70 points lower than students in Wyoming and getting the same grade." The only test that students in Wyoming and Mississippi share in common is NAEP. In 2007, Wyoming's fourth graders score 225 on NAEP reading and Mississippi 4th graders 208. That is a big difference on the NAEP scale, but it's 17 points, not 70.

No matter how Wyoming and Mississippi might differ, does the difference come, as the President asserts, from the difference in the two states' educational standards? Perhaps, but I'd put my money more on poverty. Thirty percent of public school children in Wyoming are eligible for free or reduced price lunches. In Mississippi, it's 68 percent. And, as the President himself observed, "a stubborn gap persists between how well white students are doing compared to their African American and Latino classmates." Only 1.5 percent of Wyoming's public school students are African American. In Mississippi, the figure is 50.8 percent.

Everyone agrees that American education can be improved and should be improved, especially in areas of high poverty. But the right policies and right programs cannot issue from bad data and faulty assumptions.

— Gerald Bracey
It doesn't help that Arne Duncan is a corpoRatist lackey in the (ideological) employ of the test Nazis, privatizers, and text-book publishers.

3 comments:

Charles D said...

Sounds like the best thing Obama could do for American education is to redistribute income back down to the ordinary people.

Woody (Tokin Librul/Rogue Scholar/ Helluvafella!) said...

The best thing he could do would be to prohibit any single, slender federal dime to be spent in 'private' schools of any kind.

The quality of public schools would rise dramatically of the folks now sending their kids to (partially subsidized) private schools were faced with the choiice of public schools or no schools...

Anonymous said...

I suspect a good start would be to stop funding the goddamn public schools with local property taxes!!!

OF COURSE public schools in affluent suburbs (like say, Cobb County) with its countless McMansions (inhabited by families so white they might as well be translucent) are going to perform better than public schools in Appalachia or Compton.

I've never understood why people don't take to the streets over this issue.

Thanks for this post.

It is beyond fucked up that politicians can throw around any figure or statistic they want without having to worry that our free press will do its damn job and, oh, I dunno, do some FACT CHECKING!