By RiShawn Biddle on 1.17.08 @ 12:08AM
Leaving children behind, by not counting them.
More than 90 percent of New Jersey's high school freshmen
graduate on time. That's according to statistics reported by the
state to the public and to the U.S. Department of Education, but it
isn't so. At best, just eight in ten freshmen graduate on time and
even those projections may too high. Dropouts who get General
Educational Development diplomas can also receive regular high
school diplomas if they score at least 225 on all the required
tests.
New Jersey isn't the only state in which the number of students
earning diplomas is given an overly -- shall we say? -- optimistic
spin. America is in the midst of an educational crisis, with high
numbers of high school dropouts and low academic achievement. More
often than not, school performance data reported by state and
federal officials fails to convey this reality.
Because of bad reporting, it can be difficult to get a handle on
how poorly traditional public schools are doing in teaching
children, keeping them safe, or knowing if they are even attending
school. This makes it more difficult for school reformers,
especially those in the standards-and-accountability movement, to
get parents to embrace the stiff medicine that they tout as
necessary reforms.
This spotlight on data quality comes courtesy of the No Child
Left Behind Act, whose accountability rules have spawned and
revived an array of statistical measurements. For the National
Education Association and suburban school districts, which don't
want to surrender their control over curricula, the federal law has
been a constant source of consternation. The standards movement
sees these measurements as keys to bolstering their arguments.
For reform-minded education researchers of all ideological
stripes, No Child has not only given them the ability to fully
evaluate school performance, but even get a handle on how states
and school systems track student achievement. What they have
learned proves the old adage that there is often little difference
between lies and statistics.
TAKE GRADUATION RATES, which, along with the test scores, are
mandated by No Child as key measures of achievement. Forty-seven
states reported graduation rates in 2003 that were far higher than
reality, according to the Education Trust in a 2005 report.
In 2006, 25 states didn't report graduation rates for four
categories of students as mandated under No Child. And some states
and local school districts report numbers that are suspect.
Indianapolis Public Schools in Indiana reported that 33 percent
more 12th graders graduated from its woeful dropout factories in
the 2005-06 school year than were actually enrolled. Texas may have
artificially boosted its 2005 graduation rate by labeling 12,700
missing students as "data errors."
The national numbers issued by the federal government are not
much better. The 88 percent national graduation rate reported by
the National Center for Education Statistics is likely inflated by
at least ten points, according to Nobel laureate James Heckman and
Paul LaFontaine of the American Bar Association in a report issued
last month by Germany's Institute for the Study of Labor. Another
estimate, derived from the Census Bureau's Current Population
Survey, is even more inflated because it includes GED graduates and
excludes prison inmates and those in the armed services.
If tracking graduates is tough, keeping tabs on school safety is
even more difficult. Incident reports issued through Florida's
School Environmental Safety Incident Reporting system, for example,
can be rife with errors, especially after reports were sent from
individual schools to district administrators, according to Florida
A&M researcher Nancy Fontaine in a 2003 study.
Standardized test score reports are especially troublesome. Just
three of the 20 states that reported increases in student scores on
reading tests since 2003 also showed progress on the National
Assessment of Educational Progress, the gold standard in testing,
according to a report by the conservative-leaning Thomas B. Fordham
Foundation. Another report, by standards-and-accountability think
tank Achieve Inc., shows that just five states -- Louisiana, Maine,
Massachusetts, South Carolina, and Wyoming -- have testing regimes
equal to or more stringent than NAEP's "proficient" standard.
The rules and formulas schools use in keeping track of student
performance, shaped during battles between school reformers and the
educational establishment, is one reason why school data can be so
faulty. Local school officials want to avoid being penalized for
low graduation numbers or attendance rates, especially when the
penalties include smaller budgets and public ridicule. So they
create loopholes in such measures, giving their schools the
appearance of high achievement.
Another culprit, surprisingly, is No Child itself, which allows
states to set their own performance goals -- thus allowing them to
game the system to their advantage. This is why 28 states can set
"any progress" in graduation rates as a goal. As a result, as
Heckman and LaFontaine point out, schools have "strong incentives
to raise graduation rates by any means possible," including
cheating.
For school reformers, the poor quality of school data hamstrings
their efforts to get parents on board with their reforms. But they
can take heart in revealing that traditional public schools are
struggling as mightily in offering honest statistics as they are in
educating students.
topics:
Education, Environment, Law