David Berliner has designed a provocative thought experiment.
He offers you State A and State B.
He describes salient differences between them.
Can you predict which state has high-performing schools and which state has low-performing schools?
The Roots of Academic Achievement
David C. Berliner
Regents’ Professor Emeritus
Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College
Arizona State University
Let’s do a thought experiment. I will slowly parcel out data about two different states. Eventually, when you are nearly 100% certain of your choice, I want you to choose between them by identifying the state in which an average child is likely to be achieving better in school. But you have to be nearly 100% certain that you can make that choice.
To check the accuracy of your choice I will use the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) as the measure of school achievement. It is considered by experts to be the best indicator we have to determine how children in our nation are doing in reading and mathematics, and both states take this test.
Let’s start. In State A the percent of three and four year old children attending a state associated prekindergarten is 8.8% while in State B the percent is 1.7%. With these data think about where students might be doing better in 4th and 8th grade, the grades NAEP evaluates student progress in all our states. I imagine that most people will hold onto this information about preschool for a while and not yet want to choose one state over the other. A cautious person might rightly say it is too soon to make such a prediction based on a difference of this size, on a variable that has modest, though real effects on later school success.
So let me add more information to consider. In State A the percent of children living in poverty is 14% while in State B the percent is 24%. Got a prediction yet? See a trend? How about this related statistic: In State A the percent of households with food insecurity is 11.4% while in State B the percent is 14.9%. I also can inform you also that in State A the percent of people without health insurance is 3.8% while in State B the percent is 17.7%. Are you getting the picture? Are you ready to pick one state over another in terms of the likelihood that one state has its average student scoring higher on the NAEP achievement tests than the other?
If you still say that this is not enough data to make yourself almost 100% sure of your pick, let me add more to help you. In State A the per capita personal income is $54,687 while in state B the per capita personal income is $35,979. Since per capita personal income in the country is now at about $42,693, we see that state A is considerably above the national average and State B is considerably below the national average. Still not ready to choose a state where kids might be doing better in school?
Alright, if you are still cautious in expressing your opinions, here is some more to think about. In State A the per capita spending on education is $2,764 while in State B the per capita spending on education is $2,095, about 25% less. Enough? Ready to choose now?
Maybe you should also examine some statistics related to the expenditure data, namely, that the pupil/teacher ratio (not the class sizes) in State A is 14.5 to one, while in State B it is 19.8 to one.
As you might now suspect, class size differences also occur in the two states. At the elementary and the secondary level, respectively, the class sizes for State A average 18.7 and 20.6. For State B those class sizes at elementary and secondary are 23.5 and 25.6, respectively. State B, therefore, averages at least 20% higher in the number of students per classroom. Ready now to pick the higher achieving state with near 100% certainty? If not, maybe a little more data will make you as sure as I am of my prediction.
In State A the percent of those who are 25 years of age or older with bachelors degrees is 38.7% while in State B that percent is 26.4%. Furthermore, the two states have just about the same size population. But State A has 370 public libraries and State B has 89.
Let me try to tip the data scales for what I imagine are only a few people who are reluctant to make a prediction. The percent of teachers with Master degrees is 62% in State A and 41.6% in State B. And, the average public school teacher salary in the time period 2010-2012 was $72,000 in State A and $46,358 in State B. Moreover, during the time period from the academic year 1999-2000 to the academic year 2011-2012 the percent change in average teacher salaries in the public schools was +15% in State A. Over that same time period, in State B public school teacher salaries dropped -1.8%.
I will assume by now we almost all have reached the opinion that children in state A are far more likely to perform better on the NAEP tests than will children in State B. Everything we know about the ways we structure the societies we live in, and how those structures affect school achievement, suggests that State A will have higher achieving students. In addition, I will further assume that if you don’t think that State A is more likely to have higher performing students than State B you are a really difficult and very peculiar person. You should seek help!
So, for the majority of us, it should come as no surprise that in the 2013 data set on the 4th grade NAEP mathematics test State A was the highest performing state in the nation (tied with two others). And it had 16 percent of its children scoring at the Advanced level—the highest level of mathematics achievement. State B’s score was behind 32 other states, and it had only 7% of its students scoring at the Advanced level. The two states were even further apart on the 8th grade mathematics test, with State A the highest scoring state in the nation, by far, and with State B lagging behind 35 other states.
Similarly, it now should come as no surprise that State A was number 1 in the nation in the 4th grade reading test, although tied with 2 others. State A also had 14% of its students scoring at the advanced level, the highest rate in the nation. Students in State B scored behind 44 other states and only 5% of its students scored at the Advanced level. The 8th grade reading data was the same: State A walloped State B!
States A and B really exist. State B is my home state of Arizona, which obviously cares not to have its children achieve as well as do those in state A. It’s poor achievement is by design. Proof of that is not hard to find. We just learned that 6000 phone calls reporting child abuse to the state were uninvestigated. Ignored and buried! Such callous disregard for the safety of our children can only occur in an environment that fosters, and then condones a lack of concern for the children of the Arizona, perhaps because they are often poor and often minorities. Arizona, given the data we have, apparently does not choose to take care of its children. The agency with the express directive of insuring the welfare of children may need 350 more investigators of child abuse. But the governor and the majority of our legislature is currently against increased funding for that agency.
State A, where kids do a lot better, is Massachusetts. It is generally a progressive state in politics. To me, Massachusetts, with all its warts, resembles Northern European countries like Sweden, Finland, and Denmark more than it does states like Alabama, Mississippi or Arizona. According to UNESCO data and epidemiological studies it is the progressive societies like those in Northern Europe and Massachusetts that care much better for their children. On average, in comparisons with other wealthy nations, the U. S. turns out not to take good care of its children. With few exceptions, our politicians appear less likely to kiss our babies and more likely to hang out with individuals and corporations that won’t pay the taxes needed to care for our children, thereby insuring that our schools will not function well.
But enough political commentary: Here is the most important part of this thought experiment for those who care about education. Everyone of you who predicted that Massachusetts would out perform Arizona did so without knowing anything about the unions’ roles in the two states, the curriculum used by the schools, the quality of the instruction, the quality of the leadership of the schools, and so forth. You made your prediction about achievement without recourse to any of the variables the anti-public school forces love to shout about –incompetent teachers, a dumbed down curriculum, coddling of students, not enough discipline, not enough homework, and so forth. From a few variables about life in two different states you were able to predict differences in student achievement test scores quite accurately.
I believe it is time for the President, the Secretary of Education, and many in the press to get off the backs of educators and focus their anger on those who will not support societies in which families and children can flourish. Massachusetts still has many problems to face and overcome—but they are nowhere as severe as those in my home state and a dozen other states that will not support programs for neighborhoods, families, and children to thrive.
This little thought experiment also suggests also that a caution for Massachusetts is in order. It seems to me that despite all their bragging about their fine performance on international tests and NAEP tests, it’s not likely that Massachusetts’ teachers, or their curriculum, or their assessments are the basis of their outstanding achievements in reading and mathematics. It is much more likely that Massachusetts is a high performing state because it has chosen to take better care of its citizens than do those of us living in other states. The roots of high achievement on standardized tests is less likely to be found in the classrooms of Massachusetts and more likely to be discovered in its neighborhoods and families, a refection of the prevailing economic health of the community served by the schools of that state.
It’s all about the zip-code. Why do we continue to LET millions of dollars be spent year after year on research that always says the same thing…poverty is the reason for the achievement gap?
You could apply this same thought experiment to the urban/suburban divide in so many states. WhenI taught in the inner-city, I would attend conferences with suburban teachers who expressed great pride in their school’s high test scores —the not so subtle message in these conversations was their belief that high scores could be largely attributed to their superior teaching force in their school. I did have the nerve at once conference to ask a group of suburban teachers the following thought experiment: so, if you were to move your entire faculty into my school and we were to move my faculty to your school, your school would experience a drop in test scores and my school would see a rise in test scores. The silence that followed answered my thought experiment.
You could make this a realistic offer by swapping the two top 8th grade math teachers.
Bravo!!! Imagine if this was retweeted a million times…the message is LOUD and clear!
We might also add that State A is much more densely populated than state B, having an average of 852 residents per square mile while state B has 57 per square mile. Density allows state A to take advantage of economies to scale that are not available to state B.
Follow the money. School policy is all about taxes, profits, foundation donations, and campaign contributions. When policymakers blame teachers and parents, that is a smokescreen.
Note the recent disclosure that the Broad Foundation gave a huge grant to the state of New Jersey with the provision that the money can only be spent while Christie is in office.
David left this out.
http://www.tbf.org/news-and-events/news/2013/october/charter-school-report-2013
I invite Dave to read this as well.
http://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2013/06/22/reshaping-debate-charter-schools/h2nNm1vLik8Tvai841SP3I/story.html
This is brilliant. Did you also consider the differences in racial composition in State A and State B public school systems?
. . . or that State B has experienced explosive growth and seen its population grow by 80% in the past 20 years, whereas State A, with hardly any developable land and intense local opposition to reforming zoning laws, has grown by a relatively modest 10%? What about the impact of real estate and local costs of living on average incomes? Do the NAEP scores include charter school performance?
Bill F. – it was undoubtedly left out because the information contained within is unreliable. It was a paper commissioned by foundations that like charters – Boston Foundation and New Schools Venture Fund, and done by economists. It is not peer reviewed research, and was obviously released directly to the press, not to a journal. Plus some of their methods of the charters are a bit suspect, and then there’s the entirely suspect bit about how the charters cherry-picked their students. But don’t let that get in the way of your perceived “gotcha” moment.
AZ is indeed a sad place for children these days, and I am grateful I moved when I did.
It looks to me like this research comes from his doctoral dissertation, and certainly parts of it are forthcoming in peer reviewed journals (See the author’s CV here: http://economics.mit.edu/grad/crwalt/cv)
The methodology of the study would seem to eliminate the issue of “cherry picking” by matching individual lottery winners and losers, though it would be interesting to see how survivor bias was handled.
South Korea after the end of the Korean War was poorer than Haiti yet managed to increase the educational level of their population enormously. China still has enormous poverty in the countryside but does pretty good educationally.
There is a correlation between poverty and poor academic performance but the principal
casual factor driving both poverty and poor academic achievement is low IQ.
Disagree…
You can’t use China as a counter-example, because Chinese test scores are only from wealthy parts of the country, such as Shang-Hai. They don’t have country-wide statistics. It would be akin to using the results in a wealthy suburb of NY (where I teach) as an indicator for the country. As well, because Education is run federally poorer areas received more money in an effort to improve them. This is the opposite of our local funding model.
Test scores are NOT an indicator of acadedmic achievement. They shoe book learned kids w/o a lick of common sense. They judge limited skills and the ability to mtake a test. They judge which country has the most kiss butts who are willing to sit and memorize and memorize and memorize. It excludes those like Einstein, Temple Grandin, and a bunch of other geniuses who can really do things.
My advice to South Korean kids is don’t let your schools or your parents put you in a box full of word games and math riddles. They are doing it for their own egos, not for your interest. Find your passion and follow it. And if your parents don’t like it, respectfully say it is important for your life.
MIT is well known for putting out quack research.
Brilliant!
As someone who has lived in State B since 1977, I have read Dr. Berliner’s books and questioned my principals about them. After Dr. Berliner’s book, “Collateral Damage: How High-Stakes Testing Corrupts America’s Schools”, I asked my principal how all children were going to achieve the same by 2014? He actually argued with me how it was possible. I eventually was moved to another school, because you didn’t dare disagree with this guy. Enough is enough in Arizona. It is time to wake up the people in this state. They don’t seem to see what is happening or worse–care what is happening. I think it is time to bring Dr. Ravitch here to open this debate. Dr. Berliner is just the person to do so. Please, someone in this state, wake up the people!
My prediction is that the standardized test is still not an indicator of academic achievement and does not show what the child can do.
I suspect that the accuracy of a standardized test depends a great deal on the test and the kind of academic achievement that one is interested in measuring. I doubt that anyone who is not highly gifted in mathematics, for example, would do well on the AIME tests or say the Putnam exam.
Wonderfully written. Disturbing. And no surprise, alas. Thanks for calling attention to Berliner’s article and this plight. Until we have informed educators making educational policy instead of politicians, positive change will continue to be a challenge.
I hope people in the states are watching the rule-writing for ESSA. The ed reform movement has enormous clout at the state level and they will utterly dominate how your schools are run under this new law unless ordinary people get involved.
I know most ordinary people can’t take time off work and compete with professional lobbyists, but they will be writing these laws at the state level unless the public intervenes.
This is who is running Ohio’s ESSA process:
“Sponsored by Philanthropy Ohio, the Ohio Department of Education and the Thomas B. Fordham Institute
Join in the conversation and contribute to Ohio’s Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) plan.
Engage in a regional meeting to share your thoughts and perspective on the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) and Ohio’s developing state plan. This meeting is an exciting opportunity to gather valuable input from various perspectives from local educators, funders, parents, students and community members. The meeting will include an introduction from state superintendent Paolo DeMaria, a brief overview of ESSA and group discussions around specific provisions and options.”
Unless you agree that The Thomas B Fordham Institute should be directing every public school in the state you better take time off work and show up. God knows our lawmakers will happily accept whatever boilerplate pre-written law these ed reform lobbyists churn out. They’re probably already passing out the text of the law they want. It won’t be written to benefit public schools.
Public schools will get screwed (again) if ed reformers are drafting laws that govern public schools. Our schools need advocates to show up.
I know Diane supported ESSA but I have such a bad feeling about it. The fact is it’s easier to lobby and buy state lawmakers and people don’t pay as much attention to state law.
Ed reformers will be drafting ESSA. The echo chamber will be drafting these state laws.
I know I tend to be cautious and perhaps this is overly cautious, but if this small group of echo chamber employees write these laws to disfavor existing public schools our schools won’t survive. They can’t take hit after hit after hit. They’re resilient but nothing is that resilient.
I hope public school advocates didn’t make a terrible mistake supporting this law. ESSA looks to me so far to be completely captured by the same people who brought us all the other garbage ed reforms in Ohio. It’s the same names, the same orgs and it will be more free market dogma.
The reason I supported ESSA was to get rid of NCLB, AYP, and federal mandate for VAM.
Lots of acronyms causing lots of harm. Not much changes except that John King no longer Has the weapons that Duncan had to destroy schools
Ethnicity should not be a factor, the fact that education is not the same, or the material and environment is given much less attention than a school that is predominately white. It is racist to think that a person’s ethnicity is a factor when rich minorities living in rich communities do just as well as their European American peers. It is purely an economical variable; I hope your preconceptions don’t dictate the way you educate your students.