Showing posts with label education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label education. Show all posts

Sunday, September 11, 2016

Educating Ourselves on Education


I've been wondering: is discernment possible without examining evidence?

When we repeat unfounded, unfactual ideas, who pays the price?

A few weeks ago I helped buy back-to-school supplies for some children I know who live in one of Pennsylvania’s poorest neighborhoods.

The supply list sent home included the obvious school items: pens, pencils, paper, but also paper towels and Kleenex. 
Can more money fix America's schools? NPR, April 25, 2016

Weird, right?

Unless you know that in some schools even simple necessities like those are not available if teachers or parents don't supply them. 

A day or two later I had dinner with an acquaintance who spoke with passion about the money wasted by the Philadelphia schools.

“We keep pouring money into that system and it just disappears.”

Sometimes I bite my tongue.

But if votes are decided and policy put in place on the basis of generalized nonsense, inequity continues.

And grows.

And swallows whole communities.

Per pupil spending in Philadelphia is far less than in the school district my acquaintance’s children attended.

About half as much, in fact.

Apparently high-end wireless microphones for school plays for wealthy children are justifiable expenses, while school libraries and computers for poor children are not.

I’ve written before about Pennsylvania’s inadequate and inequitable school funding.

But the narrative of school failure continues, fed by politicians eager to privatize education. According to a video on Donald Trump’s Issues Page:  
We are rated 28 in the world, the United States, think of it – 28 in the world, and frankly we spend far more per pupil than any other country in the world by far it’s not even a close second.   So here we are, we spend more money and we are rated 28. Third world countries are ahead of us.   We spend far more per pupil than any other country in the world. By far. And if you look at education. Out of thirty countries. We’re last. We’re like 30th. We’re last. So we’re last in education.
Aside from the general incoherence of his statements, there's also a question of fact.

No, we’re not 28. Or 30. Or "last." 

And we don’t spend far more per pupil than any other country.

By one international standard, Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS), American kids rank 7th out of 42 countries.

On the Progress in International Reading Literacy Study, America’s public school students rank 6th out of 53 systems tested.

On the most widely used, the Program for International Student Assessment, (PISA) 15-year-olds in 65 countries are tested in math, science, and reading. In 2012, the last available year, the US ranked 35th in math, 27th in science, and 24th in reading.
 
PISA Scores 2012, OECD, focus added by Business Insider, June 6 2015
So, it’s true that American students are not doing as well as we might like. 

But it’s not true that we spend far more than other nations. On per-student spending, the US average was $11,732 per full-time student in 2012 – behind Switzerland ($15,512), Norway ($13,611) and Austria ($12,164).  

Given differences in cost of living, a better comparison might be percent of GDP invested in education. By that measure, the U.S., at 3.6%, doesn’t make it onto the list of top 25 countries.


Trump’s conclusion that school choice would improve scores is contradicted by the statistics: nations with top results have strong, centrally-administered public school systems; consistent, equitable funding; focused attention on pre-K preparation for low-income, at-risk students; high public respect for teachers and schools.

For anyone really interested in understanding the numbers, it’s a complicated story.  But the question of which school systems waste money is far simpler to address for anyone who has even a small interest in the truth. The Commonwealth Foundation offers a website that allows comparison of districts on per pupil spending, money allocated for classroom attendance, special education and more. Here's how Philadelphia and neighboring Lower Merion compare. I've added Reading - one of the most underfunded districts in the country.


A quick interpretation: Lower Merion spends more than twice as much on its students, but a smaller percentage is spent on instruction. In other word, Philly and Reading are putting a higher share of their dollars into the classroom and doing their best to educate high needs children with less than half the funds. 
  
To put that spending in context: Philadelphia has the highest number of people living in “deep poverty” of any large city in the U.S. In 2015, the threshold for deep poverty was an annual cash income of less than $5,885 for an individual, $7,965 for a single-parent with one child, or $12,125 for a married couple with two kids. Nationally, one in ten children is now living in deep poverty. In Philly, that number is closer to one in four.  

People in deep poverty tend to be transient, living with friends, sometimes sleeping on the floor in a relative’s apartment. They frequently struggle with mental illness. Illiteracy is often a factor. Add in food insecurity. Inadequate child care.

Children in poverty, in addition to unstable home arrangements, often experience trauma from exposure to violence and crime. They are less likely to attend preschool, less likely to be exposed to books, games and enriching experiences in the home or local community. They start school less prepared than their wealthier peers, in systems less able to offer extra help or support.

On Tuesday, our state Supreme Court will hear a two-year-old lawsuit about school funding inequities. Six school districts, seven parents, and two advocacy organizations will again call attention to the vast disparities in resources among Pennsylvania’s schools. The suit describes Pennsylvania educational system as “the nation’s most inequitable and irrational,” with “’gross disparities’ in per-student funding”: 
the Commonwealth’s total investment in a child’s education can range from as little as $9,800 per student in low-wealth school districts to more than $28,400 per student in high-wealth districts. Those disparities exist not because highwealth districts have chosen to invest more in education; low-wealth districts often have property tax rates far higher than wealthier districts.
Nor are those disparities the result of differences in student need; students in lowwealth districts have needs that warrant more, not less, funding. Rather, the disparities exist because the structure of Pennsylvania’s funding scheme prevents low-wealth districts from ever closing the funding gap. 
I’ve heard, more times than I can count, that “throwing money at it” won’t solve the education problem.

There’s a difference between throwing money and investing wisely.  “Investing” is what we call it when we’re thinking of the future. “Throwing money” is what we call it when we simply don’t care.

Does money make a difference?

When you really consider, it seems a ridiculous question. 

Put it another way: 

Should low income children be provided high quality preschool? 

Yes.

Certainly affluent parents who invest in preschool for their children must see some benefit. The benefit is even greater for children who grow up in households without books, games, educational toys, without educated adults with time and ability to to read and play and teach.

Are smaller classrooms and better-trained teachers helpful?

Yes.

Small class sizes allow more individual attention, more help to students who need it. Put thirty already-behind kindergarteners kids in a room with no aides and no parent volunteers and they’ll be further behind by the end of the year. Every time.

And the more difficult the neighborhood, the more essential that teachers are experienced and well-trained. Too often the schools where excellent teachers are needed most are the schools that can least afford them.

What about money for school libraries? 

Yes. How will kids with little access to books develop a love of reading?

School nurses and therapists? Of course. Have you ever watched a child in pain, emotional or physical, struggle to focus or stay on task? 

When I dig into numbers, looking for evidence of waste, I see two things:

A pension problem primarily caused by legislators who undercut investment and now are reaping the fruit of that decision: “[i]n reality, based on actuarial need, the state continually hasn't kicked in enough money to cover its growing debt, the single biggest reason for the dire straits the state now faces.” 

The other major money drain is one Donald Trump has promised to expand: funds shifted from public schools to for-profit corporations through loosely regulated charter school schemes. The school where he chose to speak about education last week was a publicly funded, for-profit charter school that received an F on recent evaluations, compared to the surrounding school district, which received a C.

While public schools on average spend more money on instruction, charter schools spend more on administrative costs: high executive salaries and undisclosed profits.


This is true in Ohio, where Trump made his "school choice" speech. And in Pennsylvania, where 
inadequate oversight and a lax law have allowed a significant number of bad players to siphon millions of taxpayer dollars into their pockets, at the expense of Pennsylvania’s public school children.• Nick Trombetta, founder of the state’s largest cyber charter school (PA Cyber) has been indicted on multiple charges and is accused of siphoning more than $8 million from the school.• June Brown went on trial for allegedly defrauding the 4 Philadelphia charter schools that she founded of $6.7 million.• Recently the eighth Philadelphia charter school official pleaded guilty to federal fraud charges. 
Charter management organizations are permitted to spend unlimited taxpayer dollars on advertising, political lobbying, 7-figure CEO salaries and other expenses that are unrelated to educating children. 
I would love to see every child in our state and in our country attend a clean, safe, well-resourced school.

I can’ t make it happen.

What I can do:
  • Refuse to vote for legislators who villainize teachers and public education or who offer privatized “choice” as a solution to “wasted money.”
  • Push back – gently and politely – when people I know suggest we’re “pouring money away” in funding urban schools.
  • Applaud organizations working to inform voters and advocate for adequate, equitable funding. 
  • Pray for sight for the politically blind, wisdom for the willfully foolish and justice for those who without it will never reach their potential or find a way to flourish.


This post is part of a series on What's Your Platform 
Beyond the Party Platform July 24, 2016
A Different Way July 31, 2016 
Election Fraud and Rigged Elections, August 10, 2016 
How Long Will the Land Lie Parched? August 21, 2016 
Walls, Welcome, Mercy, Law August 28, 2016
Workers and Their Wages, Sep 3, 2016 

Sunday, October 25, 2015

Failing Our Future

"Budget Impasse is Killing Schools"
Pennsylvania is now almost four months into a costly budget impasse, and underfunded school districts are going further into debt, with over $410 million borrowed so far, according to the state’s Attorney General  Eugene DePasquale.

Our poorest school systems are operating without school nurses, counselors, librarians.

And our already inequitable schools become more inequitable by the minute.

The impasse has prompted some school districts to blockpayment to charter schools, calling attention to state law that requires charters to be funded even when districts don’t receive state funds. 

And the impasse offers further fuel to a lawsuit filed last year  by the Pennsylvania Association of Rural and Small Schools, the NAACP Pennsylvania State Conference, six school districts from across the state, and seven representative parents. The suit asks for redress of a school-funding model that fails to meet the state constitutional requirement of a "thorough and efficient system of public education" for all children, allowing wealthy schools districts to spend 33 percent more per pupil than the poorest.

The suite was dismissed by the PA Commonwealth Court, and has been appealed to the PA Supreme Court (one more reason to think carefully about the three seats open in next Tuesday’s Supreme Court election).

Pennsylvania has some of the best schools in the country.  

And some of the worst.  

Even our best, though, rank poorly compared to the worst among the public schools of Finland.  (An interactive US New site allows comparisons of schools to a mix of national averages).

Our system is based on more and more unfunded legislative mandatesexpensive standardized tests that punish underfunded systems and subvert real learning,  mind-numbingly detailed objectives, endless paperwork that zaps teacher motivation and accomplishes little, constant labeling and competition with ever less support.

Finland’s system, forty  years ago, refuses any standardized tests until just before graduation – from high school.

Funds all schools at the same level, with careful formulas to add extra support to at-risk students with language differences or other special needs.

Provides autonomy and free education to all teachers.

Affirms the value of play, music, art, and physical instruction at every level of early childhood education.
from Programme for International Student Assessment/PISA (2003)

Works in close harmony with other support systems to make sure children are healthy, well-fed, and able to learn.

The revolution in Finnish education wasn’t apparent to the world until 2000, when  the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) conducted a sampling of 15-year-old's academic skills from 57 nations. Finland placed first in reading, fourth in science, fifth in math. The next time the PISA was administered (2003) Finland was first in reading and science, second in math. 

The US was 18th in reading, 22th in math, 28nd in science.   

The test doesn’t assess fluency in other languages, but on that Finland would again be at the top, with the US near the bottom. All Finnish students are expected to be fluent in Finnish, Swedish and English by the age of 16. Accommodations are made for children from other language backgrounds (Sami, Roma, or other immigrant groups), but all are given instruction in at least three, often four languages.

What’s striking about this is that Finland’s per pupil expenditure is almost identical to that of the US, school days are far shorter, students are given frequent 15 minutes breaks for socializing or active play, and equality of education is valued far higher than quality.

There’s also far more emphasis on teaching children to empathize with others, think issues through, and practice logic and problem solving, all activities difficult to measure on a standardized test.

Compare the page after page of detailedCommon Core objectives to the more general, even philosophical Finnish National Curriculum Guidelines.  

Finnish students matriculation exams, taken at graduation, are created by a board composed of university professors, high school teachers, and education policy-makers (not independent for-profit corporations), and graded first by the students’ own teachers, then by members of the board. Questions assess student ability to think, communicate, and weigh complex ideas: 

  • Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels predicted that a socialist revolution would first happen in countries like Great Britain. What made Marx and Engels claim that and why did a socialist revolution happen in Russia?”  
  • In what sense are happiness, good life and well-being ethical concepts?
  • Choose three world religions and compare the role and use of a holy image within them.
  • Some politicians, athletes and other celebrities have publicly regretted and apologized for what they have said or done. Discuss the meaning of the apology and accepting it as a social and personal act.
Finland’s educational reforms were driven by a vision of the future: the idea that to be economically successful, the country would need to rely on a highly trained workforce. With that goal in mind, a comprehensive program was designed to ensure that all children – at every economic level, from any language background, with any disability or special need – would receive optimum care, at public expense, from before birth to tax-paying adulthood. The program was economically driven: an economy works best when all it’s members are well-prepared to work at optimum capacity. Less crime, less poverty, less expensive to treat chronic illness. 

Key components: 
  • Excellent prenatal care
  • A “Baby Box” for all expectant parents, with clothes, diapers, mattress, other baby supplies, and books for parents and children.  
  • Generous paid parental leave and ongoing “flextime” for parents of young children. 
  • Free early childhood education designed to help all children enter school with the sae basic skills and readiness to learn
  • Free healthcare for all children
  • Free well-designed education from early education through vocational training or university

Tests can’t capture the full impact of such a comprehensive investment in the well-being of children. Consider, instead, the World Economic Forum’s annual Human Capital Index, which quantifies how well countries develop and deploy their human capital, "including information on education levels of the employed, unemployed and the inactive members of the population as well as the specific qualifications of the latest entrants to the workforce."

Finland is consistently in the top five; in 2015, it was number one.

The US? Number 17. Right behind Estonia and Slovenia.

Part of the index ranks countries on their effective investment in children 15 and younger.

On that, again, Finland was first. The US was 40th. 

I’d like to think our investment in our children would be prompted by love of neighbor, by hunger for justice, by compassion for those caught in cycles of poverty.

But even simple economic good sense should make clear that something needs to change, and soon.