On class-based affirmative action: a debate
http://prospect.org/article/class-based-future-affirmative-action
http://occupyamerica.crooksandliars.com/propublica/challenge-idea-income-can-integrate-us-#sthash.WXcyHHtc.dpbs
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/political-animal-a/2013_06/limits_of_classbased_affirmati045283.php
http://www.motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2013/06/future-class-based-affirmative-action
Saturday, June 15, 2013
Discussions on Poverty and Ed Reform on HuffPost Live
On June 7, 2013, I
participated in a HuffPost Live segment called, "Get Rich Quick With Education
Reform." Two articles that
are critical of school reform, notably, charter schools, standardized testing
and increasing attention on teacher accountability, inspired the segment (see
below). I was one of four panelists on
the segment, and the only academic. Two of the panelists are writers for online
magazines and the fourth panelist is a parent in New Orleans. The experience
was interesting. From my perspective, the general discourse about school reform
lacks important nuance and complexity and ignores larger structural issues. In
other words, it is far easier to blame student underachievement solely on
teachers rather than consider the impact of inequities relative to resources
and mandatory standardized testing as a measurement of student learning and
teacher effectiveness. During the segment,
one of the panelists who were critical of the reform, especially charter
schools and teacher accountability, raised poverty as a significant factor in
student learning. While research suggests that poverty (among other factors)
significantly impacts student achievement, this correlation fails to
contextualize how poverty impacts student learning and achievement. Thus, while
the segment was ostensibly about the profit motive of school reform, the
discussion focused mainly on the claims made by reformers to justify reform
policies that call for more testing, testing preparation, and teacher
accountability, rather than the relationship between these three reforms and
growing education market.
Labels:
education reform,
media,
poverty,
School reform
Tuesday, June 04, 2013
Each and Every Child: Reflections on the Equity and Excellence Commission’s report (part 3)
In
April, I wrote about the Equity and
Excellence Commission’s report to Arne Duncan, “For
Each and Every Child: A Strategy for Education Equity and Excellence.” The
report is broken into five sections: equitable school finance; teachers,
principals, and curricula; early childhood education; mitigating poverty’s
effects; and accountability and governance. Here, I will focus on the final
three sections.
While speaking at the Center
on Budget and Tax Accountability’s conference, at which the Equity and
Excellence’s report was presented, Pasi Sahlberg
stressed the importance of focusing on early childhood education and
intervention—a key strategy pursued by Finland in its attempt to improve
educational outcomes. Research has demonstrated the importance of early
childhood education and interventions, such as Head Start, for examples see here, here,
and here.
The Equity and Excellence report states: “If we know anything about learning,
it is that the years from birth to age 5 are crucial in every child’s life”
(pp. 28). Investing in early childhood interventions, especially for children
from low-income backgrounds, has been shown to improve student achievement,
reduce the need for special education interventions, and reduce the crime rate
(pp. 28). However, it is important to
note that simply providing an early childhood intervention does not yield huge
benefit (pp. 28-29). An obligation of policy makers concerned with improving
social and academic outcomes, must be ensuring that early childhood
interventions are high-quality and staffed with highly effective teachers with
specialized training in early childhood teaching. Simply providing early
childhood interventions without enforcing a certain standard of excellence is
only a half-measure. The Equity and Excellence report calls for massive federal
investment in “high-quality” early childhood programs; but most importantly, it
calls for aligning funded programs with research-based interventions (pp.
28-29). Too many educational interventions are pursued because they are trendy
or ideologically aligned with policy makers while lacking a consensus of the
research community on the effectiveness of such programs. Early childhood
education is an opportunity for policy makers to pursue massive investment and
reform while making research-informed decisions about how to target their
investments.
There is no doubt that poverty has an impact on students,
schools, and districts—but if you need convincing look here,
here,
and here.
In the United States, 22% of students live in conditions of poverty and nearly
half qualify for free or reduced price lunches (a measure typically used in
educational research as a proxy
for low-income). Poverty is an incredibly complex and pervasive issue, as
such, there is no simple solution; however, this report suggests a
multi-pronged which targets the symptoms of poverty rather than addressing the
issue of poverty itself. The steps suggested by the commission attempt to
mitigate the effects of poverty, such as: improving parent engagement and
education, meeting community health needs, extending learning time, and
targeting/supporting students “at-risk” (pp. 32) of dropping out. While these
steps attempt to mitigate the effects of poverty and improve academic outcomes
for students from low-income backgrounds, none of the steps aim to actually
reduce poverty itself because none focus on the root causes of, or the
mechanisms that perpetuate poverty.
The structure of educational governance in the United States
was created to address the needs of the 19th century. The funding
and educational operations are primarily states’ responsibility, falling under
the powers “reserved to the States” under the Tenth
Amendment. Through federal funding of programs such as the Education
and Secondary Education Act or the Individuals
with Disabilities Education Act, the federal government is able to exert some
control of local education agencies. Through this funding the federal
government is able to leverage some control over local educational agencies.
This has resulted in an emphasis by the federal government on completing
bureaucratic checklists rather meeting meaning goals (pp. 34). In order to
seriously address concerns about equity and excellence, this report suggests
several ways to rethink the current approaches to governance and
accountability. First, the commission recommends aligning coordination between
local, state, and federal governance structures to allow a more focused
approach to addressing equity concerns. An example of this coordination can be
seen in the development of the Common
Core State Standards. Second, initiatives to improve diversity and
equitable access to educational resources have largely been a focus of the
federal government (e.g. desegregation or the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act); in order to improve equitable outcomes the federal government
should incentivize states and districts to pursue policies that improve
diversity and equitable access to resources. Third, the commission recommends
that states develop mechanisms to intervene on behalf of schools and districts
are unable to provide the fiscal investments or academic outcomes necessary for
student success. Finally, the commission recommends rethinking both what
accountability is and how it is enforced - stressing the importance of fairness
and transparency.
This report addresses five pressing concerns in educational
policy and recommends approaches to improving equity and excellence for each
and every student. I applaud the commission’s emphasis on utilizing
research-aligned interventions and focus on improving outcomes for students
from low-income backgrounds. I applaud the report for the steps it suggests for
improving outcomes and its willingness to take on big issues like poverty and
inequitable funding; however, I worry that this report does not go far enough
and until we, as a nation are willing to address not just educational outcomes,
but the systemic societal inequities that result in inequitable educational
outcomes, we will be treating the symptoms while ignoring the disease.
What should the role of the federal government be in
addressing issues of equity in education? Does this report go far enough, too
far? I invite comments and a continuing dialogue on these important issues.
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