Editor’s note: While Diane is on a somewhat reduced blogging schedule, she has invited members of the Education Bloggers Network, a consortium of people who blog about education issues on the national, state or local level to contribute to her blog. If you are a blogger who supports public education and would like to join the Education Bloggers Network, contact Jonathan Pelto at jonpelto@gmail.com.
This guest blog is written Paul Thomas
During her tenure as Secretary of Education (2005-2009), Margaret Spellings announced that a jump of 7 points in NAEP reading scores from 1999-2005 was proof No Child Left Behind was working. The problem, however, was in the details:
During President George W. Bush’s tenure, NCLB was a corner stone of his agenda, and when then-Secretary Spellings announced that test scores were proving NCLB a success, Gerald Bracey and Stephen Krashen exposed one of two possible problems with the data. Spellings either did not understand basic statistics or was misleading for political gain. Krashen detailed the deception or ineptitude by showing that the gain Spellings noted did occur from 1999 to 2005, a change of seven points. But he also revealed that the scores rose as follows: 1999 = 212; 2000 = 213; 2002 = 219; 2003 = 218 ; 2005 = 219. The jump Spellings used to promote NCLB and Reading First occurred from 2000 to 2002, before the implementation of Reading First. Krashen notes even more problems with claiming success for NCLB and Reading First, including:
“Bracey (2006) also notes that it is very unlikely that many Reading First children were included in the NAEP assessments in 2004 (and even 2005). NAEP is given to nine year olds, but RF is directed at grade three and lower. Many RF programs did not begin until late in 2003; in fact, Bracey notes that the application package for RF was not available until April, 2002.”
With the 2013 release of NAEP data, then, shouldn’t we be skeptical of Duncan’s rush to claim victory for education reform under Obama?:
This year, Tennessee and the District of Columbia, which have both launched high-profile efforts to strengthen education by improving teacher evaluations and by other measures, showed across-the-board growth on the test compared to 2011, likely stoking more debate. Only the Defense Department schools also saw gains in both grade levels and subjects.
In Hawaii, which has also seen a concentrated effort to improve teaching quality, scores also increased with the exception of fourth grade reading. In Iowa and Washington state, scores increased except in 8th-grade math.
Specifically pointing to Tennessee, Hawaii and D.C., Education Secretary Arne Duncan said on a conference call with reporters that many of the changes seen in these states were “very, very difficult and courageous” and appear to have had an impact.
Duncan’s claims, in fact, have prompted The Wall Street Journal to announce “School Reform Delivers”:
Education Secretary Arne Duncan hailed this year’s National Assessment of Educational Progress (i.e., the nation’s report card) results on Thursday as “encouraging.” That’s true only if you look at Washington, D.C., Tennessee and states that have led on teacher accountability and other reforms….
However, a handful of states did post significant gains, and the District of Columbia and Tennessee stand out. Until very recently, Washington, D.C. was an example of public school failure. Then in 2009 former schools chancellor Michelle Rhee implemented more rigorous teacher evaluations that place a heavy emphasis on student learning. The district also tied pay to performance evaluations and eliminated tenure so that ineffective teachers could be fired.
Between 2010 and 2012, about 4% of D.C. teachers—and nearly all of those rated “ineffective”—were dismissed. About 30% of teachers rated “minimally effective” left on their own, likely because they didn’t receive a pay bump and were warned that they could be removed within a year if they failed to shape up.
Clearing out the deadwood appears to have lifted scores.
As I warned on the release date of NAEP, we should anticipate this careless and unsupported eagerness to use NAEP data as evidence of corporate reform success.
Jim Horn has highlighted that NAEP shows a powerful picture of the growing problem with re-segregation and the entrenched reality of racial and socioeconomic achievement gaps—messages ignored by Duncan. At the very least, then, Duncan is cherry-picking.
Gary Rubinstein has also dismantled the DC “miracle,” and G.F. Brandenburg provides a clear chart showing that DC gains are a continuation of a trend pre-Rhee. As Rubinstein concludes:
I’m still pretty confident that in the long run education reform based primarily on putting pressure on teachers and shutting down schools for failing to live up to the PR of charter schools will not be good for kids or for the country, in general. I hope politicians won’t accept the first ‘gains’ chart without putting it into context with the rest of the data.
With the USDOE at Duncan’s disposal, it seems careless and inexcusable to make unproven claims that policy has caused test score changes when no one has had time to analyze the data in order to make such claims
Like Spellings, Duncan is showing that he is either unqualified to be Secretary of Education due to a lack of understanding of statistics or that he is willing to place partisan politics above what is best for children and public education. Either way, this is yet another example of failure from the top in the world of education reform and politics.

Interesting idea to have guest bloggers and an interesting post. I look forward to reading the responses.
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I like the idea of guest bloggers helping out Diane!
Could someone please try to make sure that the guest bloggers include quotation makes in appropriate places though? Unknowing minds are not very likely to know where the above quote from the WSJ article ends and Thomas’ commentary begins, because there is no closing quotation mark (which should come immediately after “Clearing out the deadwood appears to have lifted scores”), so that can be very confusing.
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My blog template identifies set-off quotes; sorry it isn’t clear in this template. See:
http://radicalscholarship.wordpress.com/2013/11/08/from-spellings-to-duncan-using-naep-as-policy-propaganda/
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This is a timely and helpful post. The misuse of NAEP data was well-explained in Diane’s recent book. For a representative example, see this video from last year where David Steiner moderates a panel on the role of literature in the Common Core (includes Mark Bauerlein, Sandra Stotsky, and Robert Pondiscio). Stotsky calls out the problems of the Common Core starting at 10:58; Pondiscio twists the NAEP data starting at 14:51: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zLjhQKqmOU
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I agree completely with the first embedded link (Schools Matter, 9/26/11) that the issue is one of POWER. While I am happy that our experts dice up the data and show where our data-happy leaders haven’t a leg to stand on data-wise, my sense is that it’s time to locate our centers of power and use them politically.
One center of power lies in the wealthier suburban school districts, whose parents/taxpayers will move to protect their high-performing schools when they understand how their dollars are being used by the state to narrow curriculum through NCLB/Common Core/VAM testing, chasing high-quality teachers from the system. This is relatively dormant due to lack of investigating journalism– needs education/publication!
Another center of power lies in middle-class inhabitants of large cities who find that decent local public schools are being undercut financially by the incursion of charter schools. Whatever’s working in NYC (DeBlasio election) needs bottling & distribution!
The sleeping giant in red & purple states responds to tax dollars. I feel we could really benefit from some studies showing what surely must be, starting with NCLB, rising w/RTTT & spiking w/CCSS implementation: a huge redistribution of tax dollars from teaching salaries toward administration at all levels including state DOE’s. Show us the money!
Last but not least: the champions of poverty-stricken inner-city & rural schools must be shown that the so-called “raising the bar” ballyhooed by ed-reformers is nothing more than a grab for fed tax dollars by for-profit entrepreneurs who are using them as pawns!
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Very well organized here and clear. Thank you.
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This statement hits “THE NAIL ON THE HEAD”
The sleeping giant in red & purple states responds to tax dollars. I feel we could really benefit from some studies showing what surely must be, starting with NCLB, rising w/RTTT & spiking w/CCSS implementation: a huge redistribution of tax dollars from teaching salaries toward administration at all levels including state DOE’s. Show us the money!
But also please refer to the previous blog on Test Related Stress in NY..
It is the one before this blog…This article gives Scientific and Medical Evidence against the Common Core…
I see a Class Action Lawsuit from Parents…
The Test Related Stress is real and is Child Abuse backed by the Scientific and Medical Data…
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Reblogged this on Middletown Voice and commented:
Speaking of propaganda, we’re being fed lots of it in Indiana from publishers and editors all over the state who have been given the green light by Pence and his corporate lackeys pushing for corporate reforms of public education.
Don’t be fooled.
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