The National Education Policy Center has released the names of the winners of its annual Bunkum awards, which recognizes the most glaring exemplars of Bunkum, hokum, spin, and hype in the world of education research. Included in the link is a YouTube video in which the distinguished researcher David Berliner announces the winners. Be it noted that the Brookings Institution, once esteemed for the quality of its research, was awarded the Grand Prize for “the shoddiest educational research of 2013.” Be it noted that the director of Brookings’ education research program is Grover Whitehurst, former director of the U.S. Department of Education’s Institute of Education Sciences in the administration of President George W. Bush.
Please go to the link to find the links for all the winners of the Bunkum awards.
Here is the NEPC press release.
Bunkum Awards 2013
This marks our eighth year of handing out the Bunkum Awards, recognizing the lowlights in educational research over the past year. As long as the bunk keeps flowing, the awards will keep coming. It’s the least we can do. This year’s deserving awardees join a pantheon of divine purveyors of weak data, shoddy analyses, and overblown recommendations from years past. Congratulations, we guess—to whatever extent congratulations are due.
2013 Bunkum Honorees:
The ‘Do You Believe in Miracles?’ Award
To Public Agenda for Review of Failure Is Not an Option
Read Review →
The “Do You Believe in Miracles?” Award goes to the Public Agenda Foundation for Failure is Not an Option: How Principals, Teachers, Students and Parents from Ohio’s High-Achieving, High-Poverty Schools Explain Their Success
A particularly egregious disservice is done by reports designed to convince readers that investment in disadvantaged communities can be ignored. In this increasingly common mythology, students’ substandard outcomes are blamed on teachers and schools that don’t follow the miracle-laden path of exceptional schools.
Early in 2013, we sent a report of this genre out for review. The authors of this report, from Public Agenda, identified nine Ohio schools where “failure is not an option.” The report’s basic claim was that certain school-based policies and programs can by themselves overcome the impact of poverty on student performance. Among the earth-shaking recommendations were: “Engage teachers,” “Leverage a great reputation,” “Be careful about burnout,” and “Celebrate success.”
While these seem like good practices and have indeed been pursued since the time when the report’s authors were in kindergarten, it’s hard to see how they will lead to miracles. Miracles are hard to come by and even harder to sustain. In fact, notwithstanding the report’s title, four of the nine selected schools had poverty rates at the state average and thus not particularly high-poverty schools.
While it may be easy to laugh at the idea that the recommended approaches will somehow overcome the effects of unemployment, bad health care, sub-standard living conditions and the like, it is also an outrageous neglect of the fundamental social needs and problems of neighborhoods, families and children. The truth that these reports hide is that school failure will almost always prevail in a society that will not invest in disadvantaged communities and the families who live there.
The ‘We’re Pretty Sure We Could Have Done More with $45 Million’ Award
To Gates Foundation for Two Culminating Reports from the MET Project
Read Review →
The “We’re Pretty Sure We Could Have Done More with $45 Million” Award goes to the Gates Foundation and its Measures of Effective Teaching Project.
We think it important to recognize whenever so little is produced at such great cost. The MET researchers gathered a huge data base reporting on thousands of teachers in six cities. Part of the study’s purpose was to address teacher evaluation methods using randomly assigned students. Unfortunately, the students did not remain randomly assigned and some teachers and students did not even participate. This had deleterious effects on the study–limitations that somehow got overlooked in the infinite retelling and exaggeration of the findings.
When the MET researchers studied the separate and combined effects of teacher observations, value-added test scores, and student surveys, they found correlations so weak that no common attribute or characteristic of teacher-quality could be found. Even with 45 million dollars and a crackerjack team of researchers, they could not define an “effective teacher.” In fact, none of the three types of performance measures captured much of the variation in teachers’ impacts on conceptually demanding tests. But that didn’t stop the Gates folks, in a reprise from their 2011 Bunkum-winning ways, from announcing that they’d found a way to measure effective teaching nor did it deter the federal government from strong-arming states into adoption of policies tying teacher evaluation to measures of students’ growth.
The ‘It’s Just Not Fair to Expect PowerPoints to Be Based on Evidence’ Award
To Achievement School District and Recovery School District for Building the Possible: The Achievement School District’s Presentation in Milwaukee & The Recovery School District’s Presentation in Milwaukee
Read Review →
The “It’s Just Not Fair to Expect PowerPoints to Be Based on Evidence” Award goes to Elliot Smalley of Tennessee’s Achievement School District and Patrick Dobard of the Louisiana Recovery School District.
For years, Jeb Bush’s “Florida Miracle” has been unmatched as the most bountiful wellspring of misleading education reform information. But Florida and Jeb have now been overtaken by the Louisiana Recovery School District, which serves the nation as the premier incubator of spurious claims about education reform and, in particular, the performance of “recovery school districts,” take-overs, portfolio districts, and charter schools.
Superintendent Patrick Dobard has taken his suitcase of PowerPoints on the road, touting the Recovery School District’s performance. Nothing has stood in his way. Not the dramatic post-Katrina change in student composition. Not the manipulation of student achievement standards in ways that inflate performance outcomes. Not the unique influx of major funds from foundations, the federal government and billionaires. And not the unaccounted-for effects of a plethora of other relevant factors.
But Dobard is not alone. Elliot Smalley, the chief of staff for the Achievement School District in Memphis, flexed his PowerPoints to show his school district’s “Level 5 Growth.” This certainly sounds impressive—substantially more impressive, for instance, than, say, Level 3 Growth. But this growth scale is unfortunately not explained in the PowerPoint itself. What we can say is that a particular school picked by Smalley to demonstrate the district’s positive reform effects may not have been a good choice, since the overall reading and math scores at that school went down. Picky researchers might also argue that more than seven schools should be studied for more than two years before shouting “Hosannah!”
As was the case with the Florida Miracle, the Bunkum Award here is not for the policy itself—serious researchers are very interested in understanding the reform processes and outcomes in these places. Rather, the Bunkum is found in the slick sales jobs being perpetrated with only a veneer of evidence and little substance backing the claims made.
The ‘Look Mom! I Gave Myself an ‘A’ on My Report Card!’ Award
Second Runner-up: To StudentsFirst for State Policy Report Card
Read Review →
First Runner-up: To American Legislative Exchange Council for Report Card on American Education:
Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, and Reform
Read Review →
Grand Prize Winner: To Brookings Institution for The Education Choice and Competition Index
Read Review →
and for School Choice and School Performance in the New York City Public Schools
Read Review →
Back in the old days, when people thought they had a good idea, they would go through the trouble of carefully explaining the notion, pointing to evidence that it worked to accomplish desired goals, demonstrating that it was cost effective, and even applying the scientific method! But that was then, and this is now. And some of the coolest kids have apparently decided to take a bit of a shortcut: They simply announce that all their ideas are fantastic, and then decorate them in a way that suggests an evidence-based judgment. Witness the fact that we are now swimming in an ocean of report cards and grades whereby A’s are reserved for those who adopt the unproven ideas of the cool kids. Those who resist adopting these unproven ideas incur the wrath of the F-grade.
It’s apparently quite a fun little game. The challenge is to create a grading system that reflects the unsubstantiated policy biases of the rater while getting as many people as possible to believe that it’s legitimately based on social science. The author of the rating scheme that dupes the most policy makers wins!
This year, there are triple-winners of the “Look Mom! I gave myself an ‘A’ on my report card!” award, including our Grand Prize Winner for 2013!
Second Runner-up goes to StudentsFirst, which came up with 24 measures based on the organization’s advocacy for school choice, test-based accountability and governance changes. Unfortunately, the think tank’s “State Policy Report Card” never quite gets around to justifying these measures with research evidence linking them to desired student outcomes. Apparently, they are grounded in revealed truth unseen or unseeable to lesser mortals. Evidence, though, has never been a requirement for these report card grades. And naturally the award-winning states embrace the raters’ subjective values. In a delightful expose, our reviewers demonstrated that the 50 states received dramatically different grades from a variety of recent report cards: a given state often received a grade of “A” on one group’s list and an “F” on another group’s list.
First Runner-up goes to the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), which almost took the top honors as the most shameful of a bad lot. What makes the ALEC report card particularly laughable is the Emperor’s-clothes claim that its grades are “research-based.” Yes, evidence-based or research-based report card grades would be most welcome, but all ALEC offers is a compilation of cherry-picked contentions from other advocacy think tanks. Thus, what is put forth as scientifically based school choice research is actually selective quotations from school-choice advocacy organizations such as Fordham, Friedman and the Alliance for School Choice. Similarly, the report’s claims about the benefits of alternate teacher certification in attracting higher quality candidates are based on only one paper showing higher value-added scores. Unfortunately, that paper was unpublished—and the report’s reference section led to a dead link.
This year’s Grand Prize Winner is the Brookings Institution and its Brown Center on Education Policy. Brookings has worked hard over the years to build a reputation for sound policy work. But, at least in terms of its education work, it is well on its way to trashing that standing with an onslaught of publications such as their breathtakingly fatuous choice and competition rating scale that can best be described as political drivel. It is based on 13 indicators that favor a deregulated, scaled-up school choice system, and the indicators are devoid of any empirical foundation suggesting these attributes might produce better education.
Since the mere construction of this jaundiced and unsupported scale would leave us all feeling shortchanged, Brookings has also obliged its audience with an application of its index to provide an “evaluation” of New York City’s choice system. Where an informative literature review would conventionally be presented, the authors of this NYC report touchingly extoll the virtues of school choice. They then claim that “gains” in NYC were due to school choice while presenting absolutely nothing to support this causal claim. And, following from this claim and from their exquisite choice and competition rating scale, they offer the expected recommendations. They almost literally give themselves an “A.”
Seldom do we see such a confluence of self-assured hubris and unsupported assertions. It’s hard to find words that capture this spectacular display except to say, “Congratulations, Brookings! You just won the Bunkum’s Grand Prize for shoddiest educational research for 2013.”

Here’s a good study:
“States’ new budgets are providing less per-pupil funding for kindergarten through 12th grade than they did six years ago — often far less. The reduced levels reflect not only the lingering effects of the 2007-09 recession but also continued austerity in many states; indeed, despite some improvements in overall state revenues, schools in around a third of states are entering the new school year with less state funding than they had last year. At a time when states and the nation are trying to produce workers with the skills to master new technologies and adapt to the complexities of a global economy, this decline in state educational investment is cause for concern.”
I’m trying to figure out how public school kids got hit so hard when there are literally thousands of paid advocates for ed reform and hundreds of ed reform lobbying groups.
Are they just lousy advocates? Why are public school kids doing so poorly when battling for funding priority under ed reformer leadership at the local, state and federal level? My own rural Ohio district has lost 1.4 million a year under the newest StudentsFirst/Kasich budget.
Kids in existing public schools could really use an adult advocate in government. They’re losing. Why isn’t any of this ed reform cash going to them? They’ve spent billions. Why is the net result lower funding levels for public school kids?
I think we need better adult advocates.
http://www.cbpp.org/cms/?fa=view&id=4011
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Notice that even cbpp has bought into the nonsense that the purpose of public education in the U.S. is to prepare students for “a global economy.” i.e., economic “competitiveness.”
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I think it’s okay to measure people by their stated goal. The stated goal of ed reform is to do those things.
There are thousands of paid ed reform advocates and tens of advocacy organizations. It’s millions of dollars. The “return” for kids as far as funding for their (existing) public schools seems to be well below 2008.
Maybe it will trickle down from the paid advocates, lobbyists, consultants, etc. to kids in public schools. So far no discernable trickle down effect, but give it another decade, right? 🙂
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It’s okay to “measure people by their stated goal” even if that “goal” is nonsensical?
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Is it okay to “measure” people on attributes that are not measurable, i.e., the teaching and learning process?
Talk about bunkum, what’s the next level past mental masturbation?
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Does anyone think this may change, that is the lower state funding? When I was a kid, education budgets were considered hands-off.
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The emperor has no clothes, no eyes, no ears, and been magicked to always speak lies.
I’m grateful you turn this idiocy into humor.
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True! TY.
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Ah, if only the late Jerry Bracey were around to toy with these “bunkum” awards….
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I agree. Bracey would have a ball deconstructing the frauds! I miss him…really miss him. But his work lives on…thank goodness. May we never forget Bracey.
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Yes.
Here is to Dr. Bracey.
Greatly missed.
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“Even with 45 million dollars and a crackerjack team of researchers, they could not define an “effective teacher.”’
In the real world of science, this would be an interesting finding. It would suggest theoretical and methodological challenges in the field and directions for future research. Most importantly, it would suggest that the questions being asked should change. But these folks are not doing science and are not interesting in letting it get in the way of their favored views and assumptions so the capacity to change our paradigm is lost. I wholeheartedly second this nomination and the subsequent award!
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Check out the work of Arthur Combs! He’s deceased. I fell in love with Combs via his work. Then years later when he was visiting scholar at UNC, where I was professor and he a distinguished scholar, I sat at his feet for an entire year once/week just to be in his presence…love, wisdom, intelligence, sharing and clarification of ideas, and all that good stuff. Arthur Combs is (hard for me to think of him in the past) an incredible human being, scholar, and researcher. Check out his research where he identifies the qualities of a good teacher. Combs would think NCLB, RTTT, CCSS, and the rest of the lunacy is just that…LUNACY TO THE MAX. Google Arthur Combs.
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@ Yvonne:
The Arthur Combs book “Perceiving, Behaving, Becoming” – published by ASCD – is a classic.
As Combs notes, “Learning only occurs when something happens inside the learner and this is, for the most part, in his, not the teacher’s control….teaching must be a process of helping children explore and discover personal meaning…through acceptance and trust, teachers play a strategic role in this learning process…”
Importantly for a democratic republic, Combs pointed out that “We give lip service to democracy…but few administrators or teachers have found the courage to dispense with autocracy, to change their behavior, and take the plunge into creating democratic atmospheres.” The kind of corporate-style “reform” that’s peddled now makes things even worse.
What has happened to ASCD since then? ASCD has taken Gates money and gone all-in on the Common Core too. And the ASCD “leadership” parrots the same nonsense that was contained in ‘A Nation at Risk’ and that gets trumpeted by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, that “the economic vitality of the United States” is dependent on rigorous “benchmarked college- and career-readiness standards.” Barf.
Are there ANY “professional” educational organizations that competent leadership?
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Democracy, I will ask Mercedes Schneider whether she knows of any professional education group that has not taken Gates’ money to get on the CC bandwagon.
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Diane,
The Quixotic Quest Bandwagon hasn’t taken any of Billy the Gates’ money!
Oh, you said “professional”. Doesn’t one have to make/take money in a venture to be considered “professional”? So much for the QQB being professional.
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Diane:
It seems to me that almost all of the “professional” organizations have hopped on the Common Core bandwagon. ASCD. The National PTA. The American Association of School Superintendents. The National Association of Secondary School Principals. The National Association of Elementary School Principals. The AFT. The NEA.
Is there no competent, authentic leadership out there?
Those who care deeply about American public education –– and what it means to democratic citizenship and to a vibrant, democratic republic–– should be very concerned.
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I come from hard science fields, where politicalization is much less pronounced. Does education research have any real constraints on it from politicalization? I assume not, as history and economics doesn’t, which is why I am only familiar with both from amateur pursuits.
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“Institute for Educational Sciences?”
That’s an oxymoron on par with “Business Ethics.”
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Michael Fiorillo: NCLB renamed the US Department of Education’s Office of Education Research and Information and made it the Institute for Education Sciences. Whitehurst was named as director for a six-year term by President George W. Bush. After serving in the second Bush administration, he became director of the Brown Center at Brookings, where he is a fervent advocate for school choice and issues regular “ratings” of school districts to honor those that offer the most school choice, a traditional Republican priority. Brookings used to be considered DC’s leading “liberal” think tank. Not on education. Although I bear Whitehurst no animus, I am still baffled that he “fired” me as an unpaid Senior Fellow at Brookings in 2012, in the middle of the Presidential campaign. (He was an advisor to Romney; I criticized Romney on the day I got the email informing me that I was no longer a Senior Fellow). It was a position I had held for nearly 20 years. He claimed I was “inactive.” That was at a time when my last book was rated #1 in social policy on amazon, a rating that Brookings usually cares about because it shows the ability to translate policy ideas into public discourse.
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The use of the term “Educational Sciences” illustrates the scientism and pseudo-science that is endemic to debates about education, and which deserves a loud, dismissive laugh in response.
While there is a place for the scientific method in education research, that does not make it science. The people engaged in that research need to be much more humble and tentative in their conclusions, and the parents and teachers need to be much more skeptical in judging it.
Without trying to be too flippant and anti-intellectual, to call educational research a “science” borders on the preposterous, since the number of variables to control for makes generalizations difficult to support. Education is littered with political agendas masquerading as “science.”
The great mathematician Norbert Wiener, coiner of the term “cybernetics,” wrote in his book “God and Golem, Inc.” that “The use of mathematical formulae had accompanied the development of the natural sciences and become the mode in the social sciences… so the economists (and education researchers:MF) have developed the habit of dressing up their rather imprecise ideas in the language of the infinitesimal calculus.”
As a consequence, when some so-called reformer tries to short circuit what is fundamentally a political debate with the tired “Research shows…” I hold on to my wallet.
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I always considered Brookings to be center right and never thought of it as “liberal”.
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I’m generation Y and I can state, unequivocally, that Brookings is considered mainstream conservative to us. An org can only take so much oligarch cash before it ruins its reputation.
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Michael Fiorillo: thank you for your comments.
What you describe comes up in the ed debates as “mathematical intimidation.”
I know firsthand whereof what I speak. I am a little less innumerate than I was some five years ago. Amazing what just a little peek behind the curtain of data analysis does for one’s understanding—and for building some immunity to the infectious and toxic nonsense the edubullies and their accountabully underlings sling around.
😎
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“The ‘Look Mom! I Gave Myself an ‘A’ on My Report Card!’ Award”
Love that.
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Now we know why Diane was ejected from Brookings – she would have rejected their nonsense.
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Reblogged this on Transparent Christina.
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Let’s give a Bunk ‘Em award to the Education Reformer who came up with the calculation that 60% (Danielson) plus 100% (MOSL) = 100% of the teacher evaluation. Calling the MOSL 40% while saying at the same time that it alone will deem you “ineffective” no matter what the other “60%” is – that person is double-speak genius.
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