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Selasa, 29 April 2008

Evolution in Question

The Kansas State Board of Education circa 2005 retains the gold medal for Wackiest State Policymaking Body based on its creationism of science standards that promoted intelligent design and trampled upon the theory of evolution. (Those, of course, were overturned by the subsequent Board.)

But the Florida House of Representatives circa 2008 is a strong contender for the silver medal based on its passage on Monday of the "Evolution Academic Freedom Act," a piece of legislation modeled after one drafted by the pro-intelligent design Discovery Institute.

Any other nominees? Who should get the bronze?

Senin, 28 April 2008

Being a Traveling Mama Professor

I met a very interesting visiting scholar from abroad today, and really enjoyed our conversation. (He shall remain nameless here since who he is isn't important to my story.) This made me think of travel, and how many cool opportunities my colleagues embrace when they spend a few months, a semester, even a year hanging out at a foreign university.

My male colleagues, that is. Their wives are reportedly oh-so-flexible with their jobs. And I hear some women get to do this-- those with grown children. And maybe those with stay-at-home husbands.

I don't mean to sound ungrateful for my wonderful life or tremendous opportunities I'm privileged to have ... BUT. It is hard to imagine how exactly I would embrace a chance to live abroad. I would have to uproot my husband who works full-time and is (clearly to everyone who reads this blog) very talented. And, we'd bring my son-- sans his wonderful nanny. Of course we'd love to bring her along, but wow, would that be expensive! And no, finding good care elsewhere isn't easy, or cheap.

I think the best solution would be to allow women profs to apply for small grants so they could afford childcare to facilitate this kind of thing. Either to pay a nanny to come along, or hire someone there. The same goes for conference travel.

**Or actually--better yet---allow women to use their existing research grants to pay for childcare so they can do their work! (We can use a grant to pay for an assistant but not for childcare so we actually have time to do research--what sense does that make?)

At my wonderful but cash-strapped university a new fund is unlikely to sprout (unless some wonderful private donor created one!) But, it is happening elsewhere. Princeton University provides stipends for grad student parents to attend conferences and pay for childcare so they can do so--otherwise known as a "dependent care travel fund." Stanford provides something similar for junior faculty and Harvard does too, for all faculty.

Unfortunately, given my interests, I'm not keen on moving to an elite private school. I guess I'll keep hoping, and waiting, here in Wisconsin. Nice state, we'll just stay put and enjoy.

Institute of Education Sciences

Today's Washington Post features a very interesting article about the U.S. Department of Education's Institute of Education Sciences and its director Grover "Russ" Whitehurst.

One "major insight" that has emerged from the work of IES to date warms the cockles of my heart: "The success of students depends more on who teaches them than on nearly any other factor."

Whitehurst says the next priority area for research is to determine what makes a teacher good.

Kudos to Alexander Russo's This Week in Education blog for bringing this article to my attention.

Sabtu, 26 April 2008

Musical Elective of the Week

Music is part of a well-rounded education. In that spirit, I plan to spotlight a new artist each week (or whenever I get around to it). Of course, there are no required courses on this blog. They're all electives.

Drum roll, please...

The inaugural Musical Elective of the Week is: Kathleen Edwards.

Edwards is a 29-year-old Canadian singer-songwriter. She plays a blend of folk, pop and alt country featuring intelligent lyrics and catchy guitar riffs. Her third album, Asking for Flowers, was released in March. It follows 2005's Back to Me and 2003's Failer.

Rolling Stone calls Asking For Flowers her "strongest album yet," and NPR's All Songs Considered has said that she's "one of the most distinctive singer-songwriters to emerge in recent years." I haven't had the chance to listen to her latest album closely, but some of my favorite tracks from her past albums include "Summerlong" (also featured on the Elizabethtown soundtrack), "In State" and the title track from Back To Me, and "6 O'Clock News," "Hockey Skates" and "One More Song The Radio Won't Like" off of her 2003 debut.

I had the chance to meet Ms. Edwards briefly more than two years ago when she opened for My Morning Jacket. What a genuinely warm, down-to-earth individual. No rock star ego here.

Visit Kathleen's web site to listen to her music. She's also currently touring the U.S.--working her way into the Midwest from points East, then heading West and back up into her native Canada.

Death to Story Problems!

A new randomized, controlled experiment suggests that using real-world examples to teach mathematics concepts may be the wrong way to go. The study found that the use of story problems can obscure the underlying math and leaves students unable to transfer their knowledge to new problems. One such example is the oft-used two trains departing from different cities at different speeds. More preferable are approaches that teach math using abstract, generic symbols.

The authors of the study are Jennifer A. Kaminski, Vladimir M. Sloutsky, and Andrew F. Heckler from Ohio State University. It appears in the April 25, 2008 edition of the journal Science.

Link to the NY Times article
Link to the study

Jumat, 25 April 2008

$29 Billion Buys You A New Education System?

On Wednesday the Forum for Education and Democracy released a proposal to "transform the federal role in education." The conveners are a group of high-profile academics and educators, including Linda Darling-Hammond, John Goodlad, Gloria Ladson-Billings, Deborah Meier, and Ted Sizer.

The cynic in me might call this a $29 billion spending proposal which would result in a 75 percent increase in federal education spending ... but I'm an optimist, so I'll call it a proposed investment. And, in many ways, it is. There are many policy ideas worthy of consideration. I'm not sure it's transformational however.

First, the bad news: What it is, is a tough sell politically. The authors were aware of this, and noted that its cost is equivalent to the monthly price tag of the war in Iraq. But they could have done much more to suggest ways to use current educational resources more efficiently. For instance, what about all the federal funds squandered on spray 'n' pray professional development? Gotta be some savings there. And it would drape at least a paper-thin cloak of fiscal austerity over an otherwise jaw-dropping spending proposal.

Now, the good news: The report is right to call for additional federal investments to build human capital--particularly in so-called hard-to-staff and low-performing schools. In my opinion, the No Child Left Behind Act's biggest failures are (1) its lack of a serious focus on developing highly effective teachers and (2) its focus on punitive sanctions for 'failing' schools and districts rather than the provision of capacity building assistance to turn those schools around.

Let's stipulate two things. Number one, teacher quality is the most important school-based variable impacting student success. Number two, educational accountability is not a silver bullet.

(1) The 'highly qualified' teacher requirement is a meaningless designation. In most states, every teacher is highly qualified. What NCLB lacks is a coherent and sustained vision to enhance teacher development during the initial years in the profession and beyond. To the Forum's credit, it offers up some worthy ideas to move us off the dime: induction programs and teacher residencies as well as stronger school leadership preparation.

New educator support programs currently are allowable uses of NCLB's Title II, Part A dollars, but few of those monies are spent in such impactful ways. In 2006-07, U.S. school districts received nearly $3 billion under Title II, Part A--but 79 percent of the funds were used either to reduce class sizes (47%) or for professional development (32%). [See U.S. Department of Education Survey on the Use of Funds Under Title II, Part A (July 2007)]

(2) Educational accountability alone cannot transform schools. As one of my colleagues like to say, "You don't know what you don't know." Indeed. But the inherent presumption in educational accountability is that educators need a kick in the pants--and kids will learn. This--plus school choice--was W's and many social conservatives' primary argument for NCLB. But that's not how it works.

A main reason why educators in low-performing schools are unsuccessful is because they don't know how to work better or work differently--not because they're lazy or feckless. Changing this requires not just strengthening individual knowledge and skills but also organization-wide transformations in the conditions and culture of teaching and learning. Some of the Forum's ideas would move us in that direction.

Harvard's Dick Elmore makes this point quite cogently in a 2002 Education Next article:

"The working theory behind test-based accountability is seemingly—perhaps fatally—simple. Students take tests that measure their academic performance in various subject areas. The results trigger certain consequences for students and schools—rewards, in the case of high performance, and sanctions for poor performance. Having stakes attached to test scores is supposed to create incentives for students and teachers to work harder and for school and district administrators to do a better job of monitoring their performance.... The threat of such measures is supposed to be enough to motivate students and schools to ever-higher levels of performance.

This may have the ring of truth, but it is in fact a naïve, highly schematic, and oversimplified view of what it takes to improve student learning.... The ability of a school to make improvements has to do with the beliefs, norms, expectations, and practices that people in the organization share, not with the kind of information they receive about their performance. Low-performing schools aren’t coherent enough to respond to external demands for accountability.

The work of turning a school around entails improving the knowledge and skills of teachers—changing their knowledge of content and how to teach it—and helping them to understand where their students are in their academic development. Low-performing schools, and the people who work in them, don’t know what to do. If they did, they would be doing it already.

Test-based accountability without substantial investments in capacity ... is unlikely to elicit better performance from low-performing students and schools."


In sum, I don't begrudge the Forum for setting forth these ideas for improving American public education. I just don't think that federal policymakers or presidential candidates are in the market for something with a $29 billion price tag. Targeted investments to strengthen teacher quality in high-need schools and districts--such as those proposed in U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy and Congressman George Miller's TEACH Act or in U.S. Senator Jack Reed's School Improvement Through Teacher Quality Act--are much more likely to pass the political smell test and find their way into a reauthorized NCLB.

Further, during NCLB reauthorization (now likely to move forward in 2009-2010), one can hope that federal policymakers look toward capacity building strategies (such as those proposed in this report) to replace punitive sanctions and the use of external supplemental service providers. We have a good sense of what is takes to transform struggling schools and districts -- but it's gonna take more than cajoling, demanding and hoping to get the job done. It's going to require a financial and intellectual investment in strengthening the teaching profession and redesigning school leadership.

UPDATE: U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings's proposed rules for NCLB utterly ignore the capacity building needs I have articulated above. It's more of the same old-same old accountability and contracting out of services without support. This will not address the capacity of districts or schools to improve. See Education Week story here.

Kamis, 24 April 2008

Colson Whitehead: Giving Us Hope

Just a quick note to give major props to the New York Times for running a spot-on piece by the very refreshing Colson Whitehead in today's paper. We should all take a little time and get to know "The Guy Who’s Where He Is Only Because He’s Black."

Now if only Whitehead were able to point-counterpoint the heck out of crazyman Ward Connerly every time he opens his mouth....

Professors Are Mamas Too

I’ve had a Superwoman complex ever since I was little. There was early evidence when as a five-year-old playing Memory with my grandfather for the umpteenth time, I left the table and went over to my grandma, quite upset, and said “Grandma, I don’t know what to do. Poppa wants to win, and I don’t know how to lose!”

Getting pregnant in my third-year on the tenure track at a top tier research university, with only a half-dozen publications under my belt and in the second year of my marriage was the ultimate act of faith in my superpowers. My annual reviews had gone well and I’d been told I was ‘overproducing’ and could ‘relax’ and ‘slow down.’ Plus, I’d recently been awarded a prestigious fellowship, allowing me to focus on research for the next year. Which, I took as code to mean: “Cool-- You can have a baby and don’t even need to ask for maternity leave.”

Translation: I was clueless.

Fast forward approximately nine months when my husband and I found ourselves in the presence of a very tiny (4 lb 3 oz), very fragile baby boy, born after 36 hours of hard labor following a five-week period of flat-on-my-back bedrest. At home with our infant, who required a two-pronged feeding of breast and formula supplementation (plus pumping milk) every two hours ‘round the clock, we were a bit bewildered. The home office upstairs, which we shared, sat ready with a pack-n-play placed between our two desks. All we thought we had to do was put our kid in the bassinet and sit down at our laptops to work. We’d take turn changing diapers occasionally, and cuddle him when he needed it. No babysitter required, careers fully on-track.

Oh, please.

Three months later we were delirious, having enjoyed no more than 3 consecutive hours of sleep on any given night, unable to eat a hot meal, usually unshowered, and hopelessly confused about how life would ever become “normal” again. Me, the unusually bright capable assistant professor, found myself sitting in the parking lot of our local drug store, too sleep-deprived to figure out that I was stuck in my seatbelt because I’d unwittingly jammed my coat zipper into it. Totally, and completely stuck.

But also, completely and irrefutably in love. Our son was a gorgeous gem. His big bright eyes, tiny little fingers, pouty lower lip-- he more than "had us at hello.” There was no question, we were the proudest parents in the world. Wouldn’t change a thing. But no idea what to do next...

Well, we're still figuring it out. But given that I am far from alone in the world of profs as mamas and dadas, I'm going to occasionally use this opportunity to let you in on how it's going. Not because I have ANY secrets to success-- heck, I don't even have tenure (yet)--but because I'm hoping that giving a nuanced, and once in awhile pretty detailed, view of life as it is, will help others figure out what they want to do.

So consider it a series of sorts. With episodes only when I have "free time." Ha!

Rabu, 23 April 2008

The Graduation Rate Gap: Minding What Matters?

One of the dirtiest secrets in higher education is that getting in--the focus of 18 years of hard work in some families--is no guarantee of college success. The sad truth is that at many public four-year colleges and universities fewer than half of entering freshmen complete a degree within six years. And in some cases those low average rates conceal incredible disparities based on race and family income.

Kevin Carey of Education Sector has done a remarkable job at turning the nation's attention to this often overlooked problem in recent years. He helped create College Results Online which enables the average Joe to spend hours of fun picking out individual schools and seeing just how low their graduation rates can go. (Seriously, go check it out-- it's FUN!)

Most recently Carey issued Graduation Rate Watch, a report that uses six years of federal data to look at changes over time in the black-white gap in college completion. His primary point: between 2002 and 2006 some schools made significant strides in closing their gaps, while others did not. And in fact, some schools had (and have) no gap at all. Therefore, Carey concludes, the answers are clear: too many colleges are indifferent to the plight of minority students, they know what they need to do, and we just need to push them to do it.

Kevin and I agree on most things. We agree that the feds and states are paying far too little attention to low rates of college success. We agree that disparities in degree completion rates are unacceptable. And we agree that institutions of higher education need to be a part of the solution But on one crucial point we disagree: what should be done.

Drawing on a case study of a single college (Florida State) and its lovely college-support program CARE, Kevin contends that the solution to closing the college achievement gap lies in "creating incentives for institutional leaders to act on the knowledge that already exists." His goal in making this kind of statement is to get educators to step up-- they know what needs to be done, and what remains is to take action.

But the researcher in me hesitates to endorse this plan. Here are a few reasons why:

1. There is little evidence that differences in students' college graduation rates are primarily or even substantially attributable to school-level factors. Go back to the Coleman report--his intelligent hypothesis was that inequities in schools due to segregation were driving black/white differences in educational outcomes. But instead he found that family background and other student-level characteristics drove far more of the variation in student achievement. Yes, some school-level factors matter--among them teacher quality--but empirical evidence indicated that changing schools themselves would not diminish educational inequality much.

Why would we think things would be different in higher education? The typical argument goes like this: We know that institutional choices and policies (financial aid, academics, advising, faculty, incentives, student engagement, etc) matter in terms of student learning, retention, and attainment. Given our diverse, decentralized higher education "system" there is substantial inter-institutional variation in the quality of those choices and policies. Therefore, "institutional effects" should be significant and real.

Well, they may be significant, they may be "real," but there is little hard data to say that they are large and should be the main focus of policy reform. I'm not saying that colleges and universities aren't different from one another in ways that matter, but because higher education is not compulsory and its gates are closely guarded by the gods of test scores and $$ the level of stratification in the college entry process is so intense that students attending different schools are very different from one another. There have been very few studies of institutional effects in higher ed that deal with that selection issue appropriately. I strongly suspect that if a good study were done (and given data constraints it'd be hard to do), we'd find that policymakers would get the biggest bang for their buck by working to reduce race, class and gender disparities in who goes to college and where they go.

2. Another important concern: There can be unintended consequences when you push colleges to close achievement gaps. Take this scenario: You've got 30 percentage point gap in college completion, with 40% of black students finishing a degree in 6 years, compared to 70% of whites. You want to close that gap. So you tell your admissions director to solve the problem. And he does: by being more selective in which black kids he admits. Admitting only very highly-prepared black students may mean a decline in the number of black kids on campus, but it's likely to increase the completion rate of those who are admitted. And if he coupled his efforts with a greater effort at targeted recruiting of minorities (including directing merit-based scholarships at them) , he might succeed in simultaneously increasing diversity and completion rates. Not a bad thing per se (perhaps) but definitely not what Carey has in mind...

3. There is not a shred of evidence that FSU's CARE program actually works to increase student retention or achievement. No evaluation that takes into account who they serve to start with, nada. Yes, they've got data indicating that CARE students start with lower entering test scores than other students and end up with higher retention rates, but NO--this doesn't automatically mean that success is due to the program. What if CARE students are simply more motivated than other students-- meaning that they were more likely to be retained from the start? We don't have any way to account for that in the absence of a good ol' random assignment trial where we assign students at random to participate in CARE. Now that would be worth doing!


Of course I understand that Kevin's goals are different from mine. Ultimately he operates in a world where being 51% sure that you're right when making policy recommendations is sufficient-- after all, if we don't advocate for changes in colleges, there might not be attention paid to higher ed at all (or dollars spent). But in my little research world, I need to be much more confident that the recommendation I'm making will be effective in creating the kind of change we aim for--AND, I want to focus on what will make the biggest difference. And there's simply little hard evidence to suggest that adopting a program like FSU's would help to close the black/white gaps in completion at other schools.

Why not--instead of "tinkering at the margins" with school reform--tackle the larger and more systemic problems like ending poverty and racial segregation? (Why is it that educators and educational policymakers have a hard time seeing what happens outside of schools as being part of their domain?) Why not make higher education compulsory, and in doing so greatly increase the motivation to make high school meaningful? Why not re-envision the entire system and create a p-16 structure which compels higher ed and secondary ed to take an interest in one another?

The last thing we need to do is fan the flames of fears about accountability, encouraging colleges and universities to turn even more inward, engaging in ego-think, and directing their attention at self-preservation rather than student success. We do want them to do more-- and they can be an important part of the process of change-- but they need direct their attention at the things that matter most.

Selasa, 22 April 2008

VAM: Where It's At

Hot stuff happening in Madison,Wisconsin here tonight...it's the kick-off of VAM!

What's that you say? Why it's the national--no, international-- conference on "value-added modeling," a tool increasingly used to estimate teacher effectiveness.

VAM is complex stuff and requires much statistical savvy which is why stats gurus Doug Harris, Adam Gamoran, and Steve Raudenbush are running the event.

For those of you unable to score tickets, you can check out the papers at the conference website.

Sabtu, 19 April 2008

The Edible Schoolyard

I just returned home from the opening day of the Madison (Wisconsin) Farmers Market (spring starts late here!). And it got me thinking about how to connect food and education. No, not like culinary school, smarty pants. But getting younger kids to appreciate the bountiful harvest in their own backyard.

Fortunately, others have not just thought but acted upon this idea. The best and longest-standing example perhaps is The Edible Schoolyard in Berkeley, California. Established by Alice Waters--the award-winning and world-famous chef and owner of Chez Panisse--the nonprofit Edible Schoolyard teaches middle school students how to grow, harvest, and prepare seasonal produce through the use of an on-site garden and kitchen classroom. It's been in operation since 1997.

Here in my backyard of Wisconsin a similar effort is in existence. Wisconsin Homegrown Lunch is a partnership of the University of Wisconsin-Madison Center for Integrated Agricultural Systems and the Madison-based nonprofit, REAP. It provides locally grown produce to elementary school cafeterias. According to FarmToSchool.org, it's one of an estimated 1,115 farm-to-school programs in 34 states. One of its related initiatives is Cooking Healthy Options in Wisconsin (CHOW), which brings L'Etoile chef/owner Tory Miller into a Madison middle school to teach kids about fresh, local ingredients through cooking. Looks like Madison could have some Top Chefs in the making!

For those of you who are no longer school-aged but are interested in supporting local, sustainable agriculture, buy local and eat local! Check out the web sites of Local Harvest or Slow Food USA or consider joining a local CSA.

Jumat, 18 April 2008

College Holds Greatest Benefits for Those Least Likely To Go

A terrific new paper , presented today at the annual meetings of the Population Association of America, provides evidence of what some of us have long suspected: the kids who are least likely to attend college are the most likely to benefit from a college degree. Jennie Brand and Yu Xie contradict the Nobel prize winning economist James Heckman, among others, with their rigorous look at the usual contention that people who get the largest returns to a degree are most likely to go to college (because people are such rational actors, you know...). Instead, their complex yet easy-to-follow analysis finds 1) heterogeneity rather than homogeneity in economic returns to a four-year degree and 2) "negative selection"-- meaning that returns decline as the probability of earning a degree increases. Their data comes from three sources (NLSY79, NLS-72, and WLS) and they employ many tests for robustness. While the paper is not yet published in a peer-reviewed journal, I'm sure it will be soon. This paper has spectacular implications for public policy. Most importantly (as Mike Hout pointed out in today's discussion) it contradicts the common assumption that an expansion of degree-holders will result in declines in the average returns to a BA. Instead, Brand & Xie's evidence indicates that expansion would result in an increase in the average returns, since expansion would primarily involving moving the least-likely to attend into college.

This is social science at its best: thought-provoking and informative. Keep up the good work!

Teaching To The Test

Thursday's Christian Science Monitor ran a provocatively titled op-ed--"Good Teachers Teach to the Test." In it former Los Angeles teacher and UCLA lecturer Walt Gardner contends that teaching to the test is "eminently sound pedagogy." That's educator-speak for "it's the right thing to do."

In the era of No Child Left Behind, many educators and observers have bemoaned teaching to the test. Gardner makes the case that teaching to the test in the right way is about much more than teaching kids to fill in tiny bubbles and master only basic skills and knowledge. Sadly, that does happen in some schools.

If a test measures what we want and expect students to learn and be able to demonstrate, then why not teach to the test? Flying in the face of conventional wisdom, Gardner argues that it's entirely possible for a highly skilled educator to design an assessment integrated with their lesson plan and the overall curriculum.

Kamis, 17 April 2008

Education Missing in Latest Presidential Debate

Tom Shales wrote a spot-on column ("In Pa. Debate, The Clear Loser Is ABC") in today's Washington Post slamming moderators Charles Gibson and George Stephanopoulos of ABC News for their performance in last evening's presidential debate between Senator Hillary Clinton and Senator Barack Obama. Shales chastized Gibson and Stephanopoulos for dwelling on "specious and gossipy trivia that already has been hashed and rehashed," rather than ask substantive questions about important policy issues like education.

Their efforts resulted in the Reverend Jeremiah Wright's name being mentioned 16 times during the debate. From the way-way-backkkk machine, even the Weather Underground was mentioned twice. I expected Timothy Leary to jump out from behind the curtain at any moment.

Fascinating. Don't believe me? Read the debate transcript.

What discussion was there of education? Not much amidst the inane questions, parries and thrusts about stark raving mad pastors, imagined sniper fire, flag lapel pins, and bomb throwing radicals who were pardoned by President Clinton and who sit on nonprofit boards in Chicago.

In her opening statement, Senator Clinton vowed to "make our education system the true passport to opportunity." Later on, she called herself "a strong supporter of early childhood education and universal pre-kindergarten" and said she would "end" No Child Left Behind (NCLB). Early childhood is worthy of greater investment, but what exactly would she replace NCLB with?

Senator Obama framed some of his comments about education around the issue of tax fairness, saying that "those who are able to work the stock market and amass huge fortunes on capital gains are paying a lower tax rate than their secretaries." Obama went on to say that "investing in our schools" and other national priorities can't be done "for free." If I were a Republican, I'd call him "a tax and spend liberal." Of course, after 8 years of W, that seems like a breath of fresh air. Let's line up the millionaires and let them pay their fair share for a change.

Rabu, 16 April 2008

Watch Out: TEACH grants are the new debt trap

The Teacher Education Assistance for College and Higher Education (TEACH) Grant Program was established by Congress under the College Cost Reduction and Access Act, to benefit current and prospective teachers. This new grant is available as of the 2008-09 school year. It provides $4,000 per year to students willing to commit (as recent high school graduates) to earning a degree in education and then going to teach full-time for 4 years in high-poverty schools in a specific subject area.

On the face of it this looks like a good program-- incentives for more individuals to become teachers, teach in low-income communities, financial assistance that does not have to be repaid, etc.

But beware: If a student does not fulfill the terms of the grant it is automatically converted into an unsubsidized loan, with interest accruing starting when the loan began.

One can easily imagine many ways a student could fail to fulfill the terms of the grant.
Here are but a few examples:

1. The 18 year old student might change her mind about becoming a teacher (all you have to do to be eligible is to "plan on completing coursework necessary to begin a career in teaching")

2. She might not be admitted to a school of education. This is easy to imagine at a school like UW-Madison, where our admissions occur only after a student begins college and are quite competitive.

3. She might not succeed in the program (you have to maintain a 3.25 GPA each semester)

4. She might not find an appropriate teaching job in her local area and thus be forced to move away from home, or even out-of-state. (There is a clause for this: "There are, however, graduate degree alternatives for teachers or retirees with experience in a teacher shortage area" but the options aren't spelled out)

5. Once she's teaching, she could be laid off (new teachers are especially vulnerable to this).

6. The school at which she's teaching might change in composition, such that it is no longer considered "high-poverty." (It seems the criteria will be based on % free lunch)

For these reasons and many more, the student's "grant" of up to $16K might suddenly become an unsubsidized loan amounting to far more with interest included (something along the lines of $40K over a 10 year period).

Yet to sign up for the program the student only signs a simple form-- since it's not a loan there is no promissory note clearly spelling out terms and conditions. This is thus not like a loan forgiveness program.

We should be very concerned about the potential impacts of this highly misleading program on uninformed students. We should be especially concerned because the U.S. Department of Education knows, and it explicit about knowing-- and expecting-- that fully 80% of those receiving the TEACH grant will fail to meet its requirements and therefore have their "grant" turned into an unsubsidized loan!

Here is the text from the federal regs:

"As discussed elsewhere in this preamble, program cost estimates reflect data on recent college graduates entering eligible teaching fields, adjusted for the percentage of students who graduate, maintain a 3.25 grade-point-average and take out a Federal loan. (In the absence of any need-based eligibility criteria, Federal borrowing was used as a proxy for unmet financial need.) Data from longitudinal studies were used to estimate the percentage of recipients who graduated from college, were highly qualified, and taught in high poverty schools for four out of the eight years following graduation. Based on this data, the Department assumed _*80 percent of recipients *_will eventually fail to fulfill their service requirements and have their grants converted into Federal Direct Unsubsidized Stafford Loans."

The Teacher Education Assistance for College and Higher Education (TEACH) Grant Program and Other Federal Student Aid Programs; Proposed Rule
[Federal Register: March 21, 2008 (Volume 73, Number 56)]


At this point, the legislation has been approved and the Secretary of Education is taking comments on the proposed federal regulations.

While grants are more attractive to students than loans, there is nothing more destructive than false promises. This needs to be retooled--quickly--into a loan forgiveness program.

Spread the word.

Sabtu, 12 April 2008

American Idol Goes to "Africa"


A recent National Geographic Society-Roper Public Affairs geographic literacy study of American 18-to-24 year-olds found that more than six in ten (63%) could not locate Iraq on a map of the Middle East. Shocking, given the billions of dollars spent and thousands of lives lost, in the Bush-Cheney WMD folly.

Americans' lack of geographic literacy is not new, so it's not something we can blame on No Child Left Behind. A 1988 Gallup survey ranked Americans aged 18-24 dead last among nine Western nations in this area. Around that same time, 50 percent of high school students in Hartford, Connecticut could not name 3 countries in Africa. Egypt, Kenya, Somalia, Sudan, South AFRICA ... it ain't hard, kids.

That brings me to the most popular U.S. television show: American Idol. Beginning last season, American Idol has built an episode called "Idol Gives Back" into the series. The purpose of the episode is to raise money for worthy causes in the U.S. and internationally. Last year it raised about $67 million. Wonderful.

Something troubles me however. Last year and this year, "Africa" received a large amount of attention and support. The host and judges even traveled to "Africa" last season. Proceeds are going to help kids in "Africa." However, never once has a nation in Africa actually been mentioned on the show.

To paint an entire continent with such a broad brush is troubling. Is it because much of the African population is black? Is it because they're viewed as primitive or backwards? Or it is because American Idol thinks so little of the intellect or interest level of Americans (or Fox viewers)? "Well, those dumb bastards don't know and probably don't care about the differences between Malawi and Mozambique, so let's just say 'Africa.'"

I mean, it's clear from some of the video footage that Idol Inc. wasn't visiting Egypt, Tunisia or downtown Johannesburg. But wouldn't it be nice to contextualize the "Africans" we're assisting? Are they suffering as a result of long-standing conditions like poverty or lack of education, or from current events, such as climatic change, civil war, or geopolitical turmoil? This approach could actually teach viewers a thing or two and, if nothing else, help them to name three countries in Africa next time National Geographic comes a-calling.

Reporting from North America (please don't ask me where), this is Liam Goldrick for The Education Optimists.

Kamis, 10 April 2008

The Education of Obama


Over the past several weeks, three particularly interesting articles have been written about Barack Obama and education policy. The Huffington Post ran the first on March 14, the New Republic ran the second on March 26, and Slate ran the third on April 4.

In the Huffington Post, Michelle McNeil opined, "Would Obama approach education reform with a centrist frame-of-mind if he had the full power of the Presidency behind him, and wasn't fighting it out for the nomination?" I don't know about a 'centrist frame-of-mind', but I honestly believe he would approach it with a problem-solving mentality and not just kow-tow to the status quo much as I believe Senator Clinton would.

In the New Republic, writes: "There's at least one issue ... on which Obama's record puts him sharply at odds with the party's liberal establishment: education. Obama has long advocated a reformist agenda that looks favorably upon things like competition between schools, test-based accountability, and performance pay for teachers. But the Obama campaign has hesitated to trumpet its candidate's maverick credentials. As an increasingly influential chorus of donors and policy wonks pushes an agenda within the Democratic Party that frightens teachers' unions and their traditional liberal allies, Obama seems unsure how far he can go in reassuring the former group that he's one of them without alienating the latter. And this is a shame, because Obama may represent the best hope for real reform in decades."

Undoubtedly, I believe Obama is playing it safe by not emphasizing his education reform ideas within the context of a Democratic primary. That's smart politics, but it's made easier by many others issues--from the economy to Iraq--that are trumping education as priorities among the mass of Democratic primary voters and caucus goers.

In Slate, journalist and blogger Alexander Russo offers a more critical take on Obama and his "lackluster record" on education. Russo writes that as an Illinois state senator from Chicago, Obama failed to evidence leadership and choose sides in a debate between Chicago Public Schools (the school district) and local school councils over local control versus centralized accountability. The same dynamic is playing out around No Child Left Behind (NCLB), says Russo, but "it's hard to imagine [Obama] taking charge of the continuing debate over whether and how [NCLB] should be renewed."

Indeed, sometimes the past is prologue, but I'm not sure it would be true in an Obama administration. As US Senator, Obama has offered some very substantive proposals on teaching quality within the context of NCLB. He has supported policies such as educator induction and urban teacher residencies that would get to the root of building stronger capacity within troubled schools and districts. He has shown a personal commitment to these issues. I can see him staking out a "mend it, not end it" position on NCLB reauthorization and working with Senator Ted Kennedy and Congressman George Miller to work these proposals into a legislative package. Only time will tell.

What say you, Pennsylvania?

Rabu, 09 April 2008

New Teacher Center - Call for Proposals

The New Teacher Center is the premier national organization working to develop human capital in schools through high-quality educator induction and mentoring programs. (Full Disclosure: I am the NTC policy director.)

The NTC Annual Symposium--scheduled for February 2-3, 2009 in San Jose, California--is a terrific opportunity to connect with practitioners, researchers, and educational policymakers from across the U.S. and other nations. A Call for Proposals, with a deadline of May 1, 2008, has been issued. If you'd like to present at the NTC's 2009 Symposium, please go here for more information.