Arthur Camins, Director, Center for Innovation in Engineering and Science Education, Stevens Institute of Technology, critiques here the now-popular idea that the best way to end poverty is by improving education. While both parties continue to talk about race and poverty, they have given up on integration as a strategy. What they propose, he says, is that education is the best anti-poverty program. Unfortunately, this claim has neither evidence nor logic to support it.
He writes:
Integration has largely evaporated as a key driver in the struggle for equity. It has been replaced by the idea that education is the most effective anti-poverty program. The argument is framed by the following ideas:
“A high-quality education offers the best path out of poverty and into to the middle class. The new and improved, common-core aligned, standardized tests will accurately reflect the differential levels of student learning in areas that matter for their own future and that of the nation. Students who perform poorly on these assessments are unlikely be very successful in their post-secondary college and career endeavors. As a result, they are headed for low paying jobs or unemployment. Therefore, if we can increase their performance on these tests they will be more likely to succeed and escape poverty.”
This argument, while simplistic, sounds reasonable and appealing. However, close examination reveals that it is not evidence-based, nor is it logical.
Camins adds:
The logic about escape from poverty only works on the individual level. While individuals are certainly better off with the best possible education, there is no evidence that attaining a significantly increased percentage of high achieving students would eliminate the need for people to clean our offices, homes and hospitals, stock our store and warehouse shelves or serve us in fast food restaurants. There is no evidence that employers will suddenly agree to pay such better-educated workers a living wage that would enable them to provide adequate food, clothing and shelter so that poverty would cease to exist.
Maybe, more effective teaching will increase the size, diversity and creativity of the nation’s knowledge workforce, who will subsequently spur innovation and new kinds of well-paying employment for others. Maybe, our superior innovation capacity will offset the competitive advantage of lower wage countries. These would be good outcomes, but they will not end poverty. Unless, we commit to real high-quality universal health care, food and housing security, and full employment at fair living wages for all (through, for example public investment in infrastructure improvement), it is illogical to believe that universally high-quality education will significantly reduce, much less end poverty. Imagining that it will do so represents magical, not evidence-based logical thinking….
Sadly, too many policy makers seem more committed to enabling profiteering from the results of poverty than ending it. The testing industry is an excellent example. Education policies sanction and encourage multi-billion dollar testing and test preparation corporations that enable destructive punishment and rewards for educators, gaming the system and sorting of students for competitive access to an increasingly unaffordable post secondary system that perpetuates inequity. State and federal education policies support costly, overly stressful and time consuming high-stakes testing in order to verify and detect small differences within the very large socio-economic disparities we already know exist.
Well-designed large-scale assessments can contribute evidence for institutional and program level judgments about quality. However, we do not need to test every student every year for this purpose. Less costly sampling can accomplish this goal. I am not opposed to qualifying exams- if they validly and reliably measure qualities that are directly applicable to their purpose without bias. However, imagine if we shifted the balance of our assessment attention from the summative to the formative. Then we could focus more on becoming better at interpreting daily data from regular class work and use that evidence to help students move their own learning forward. Imagine what else we could accomplish if we spent a significant percentage of our current K-12 and college admission testing expenditures on actually mediating poverty instead of measuring its inevitable effect. Imagine the educational and economic benefit if we invested in putting people to work rebuilding our cities, roads, bridges, schools and parks. Imagine if we put people to work building affordable housing instead of luxury high rises. Imagine the boost to personal spending and the related savings in social service spending if a living wage and full employment prevailed. Imagine the learning benefit to children if their families did not have to worry about health, food and shelter. Imagine if our tax policies favored the common good over wealth accumulation for the 1%ers.
Such investments are far more logical than the current over-investment in testing and compliance regimes. Education, race and poverty are inextricably intertwined. Let’s do everything we can to improve teaching and learning. More students learning to use evidence to support arguments would be terrific. But, if we want to do something about poverty we need to ensure good jobs at fair wages for the parents of our students. That is where evidence and logical thinking lead.
At least since the adoption of No Child Left Behind legislation education reform has been promoted as an anti-poverty program and a way to narrow the racial achievement gap. Maybe that appeal is a good sign about the conscience of US citizens. Apparently, many people still believe that the connection between educational achievement, race and socio-economic status is unfair. However, no policy makers have been forthright enough to reveal or admit to themselves their real underlying logic: We have given up on ending or seriously mediating poverty. The best we can do is to give some kids who are willing and able to work hard a better chance to make good. That is why we support school choice. No one will say this out loud because it sounds so pessimistic and cynical.
Maybe it is time to hold policy makers accountable in their own behavior for what they demand of students: At least be clear about your hypothesis, experimental design and collect appropriate evidence. That would allow the public to participate in deciding whether escape from poverty for a few more students is a worthy goal that represents our values as a nation.

Exactly.. let’s increase salaries and remove workers from the system.. Make them feel they can earn a good living and support their own families. that could go along way to improve living conditions and end poverty. All this could help improve school environment and help with success in schols.
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Another fine example of the increased focus on the effects of poverty on education in particular and our civic life in general. I’m heartened to see this discussion taking place more often in the context of education. Perhaps this is one reason that so many deformers are opposed to evidence based improvements in education, it thoroughly debunks the myths they believe and spread about the poor being lazy takers. They prefer to hide behind ideological buzzwords like “grit”.
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to believe that universally high-quality education will significantly reduce, much less end poverty. Imagining that it will do so represents magical, not evidence-based logical thinking….’
It’s only magical thinking if one really believes it.
When people(some of whom are certainly no dummies) make totally illogical, irrational claims in the face of mountains of contradictory evidence — that high stakes testing and other “reforms” will improve education and end poverty — it’s best to check one’s assumptions about those making the claims.
Is it logical to assume that they actually believe the claims themselves?
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No, but it is logical to assume that “It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.” (U. Sinclair)
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Agreed, but we may need to distinguish between cases
“Sinclairular Exceptions”
While ordinary fates
Are tied to self-deceit
The salary of Gates
Does not hinge on belief
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where ‘salary’ is basically synonymous with “livelihood”
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In no small measure, economists have been relied upon for claims that poverty can be overcome by education, and this will be the outcome if policies just produce better results for more kids. This will magically happen when “best practices” are replicated at scale.”
So economists who are now hot to trot for “high quality” preschool and a gaurantee for reading fluently by grade 3. These programs and expectations are promoted by a series of inferential leaps calculated to portray them as panaceas.
One of the first inferences is that that these investments and expectations will increase high school graduation rates. That will have spillover effects…will increates entry into post-secondary education, will increase the likelihood of completing a college degree both of these increasing income, improving QUALY (a measure of quality of life years), decreasing the use of public health services, decreasing incarceration rates, decreasing domestic violence, and overall produce economic benefits that will radically reduce poverty.
Result: problem of poverty is ” fixed.”
This is the reasoning behind current efforts to privatize investments in preschool through pay for sucess contracts, also called social impact bonds, offered by Goldman Sachs, Pritzker, and other financial wheeler dealers. They figure they can make deals, hire managers, oversee the providers, get the data needed for proof of return on investment (including scores on tests, reduction in special education services), and “save the taxpayers enough money” to pay the investors at least a 5% return on their money, with incremental perks when the programs exceed the targets.
A foundation in NYC has calculated that the annual per child benefit of a high quality preschool program is slightly over $50,000. (See Robinhood.org).
A typical contract will be written for cohorts of students selected for the Intervention, tracking results for a minimum of 12 years for each cohort. Some students will be excluded to provide a control group for judging the sucess of the intervention.
My point is that inferences such as these, some based on economic and often exotic inferences, some based on solid research long in the literature of education, help to portray poverty as simply a set of conditions from which people can be rescued by “proper” interventions. The new twist from the economists and financiers is “we can do this better, cheaper, and more reliably by tapping the discipline of the. market ,” and for that we want a return on managing these projects.
In the meantime, the structural problems that sustain poverty need not be addressed.
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Privatization may actually cost us more than public services. There is a lot of duplication of services and fixed costs, profit and high salaries at the top, inherent inefficiencies, advertising, and , of course, lobbying, etc.http://www.inthepublicinterest.org/node/457
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rt,
If I may correct your first statement: “Privatization is GUARANTEED TO cost us more than public services.”
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Agree with retired teacher and Duane.
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Camins presents a very logical, and reasoned approach to our current madness surrounding our misguided attempts to “reform” education. He points out the fallacy in the argument that education alone will elevate our national goals. While he pokes holes in the logic of reformers, he does not address the conspiratorial agenda behind the “reform” movement. Not only does the “reform” movement give opportunity to few at the expense of many, the larger issue is that “reformers” want to destroy public schools to profit from educating our young people. Corporate America has allied itself with politicians to allow this to happen. Even though results of privatized education are overall poor, we continue to move in this direction. Blaming teachers for the inability of poor students to achieve at higher levels on high stakes testing is tool for removing public schools from the hands of its citizens. The flaws of the “reform” movement go far beyond the fact the assumptions are false. The “reform” movement is a corrupt collusion of politics and business to destroy a public institution for the purpose of profit.
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“Reason”
Reason only works
With reasonable folks
It doesn’t work with jerks
And doesn’t work with jokes
It doesn’t work on those
With evil moneyvations
Unreasonable to suppose
That reason rules relations
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… and while waiting for the cart to pull the horse …
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“Well-designed large-scale assessments can contribute evidence for institutional and program level judgments about quality. However, we do not need to test every student every year for this purpose. Less costly sampling can accomplish this goal. I am not opposed to qualifying exams- if they validly and reliably measure qualities that are directly applicable to their purpose without bias. However, imagine if we shifted the balance of our assessment attention from the summative to the formative.”
Unfortunately Camins is still stuck in the invalid “data driven” mode of evaluation. The invalidities are still there even with “formative” supposedly “well-designed large-scale assessments”.
There are no valid nor reliable ways to “measure qualities”. One ends up with just the thing that Camins is writing about–no evidence nor logic supports those educational malpractices.
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In other words, the Common Core testing rank, fail, fire, and close public schools is a Frankenstein, Jekyll and Hyde lottery scheme designed to profit corporate Charters, and we know that in a lottery for every big winner there are about 20 million losers. In this case, those losers will be children who live in poverty for life.
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Dwayne,
I don’t link formative and well-designed large scale assessment. They serve different purposes. See: What if We Approached Testing This Way? http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2014/05/01/what-if-we-approached-testing-this-way/
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