harvard university · program on education policy & governance director: paul e. peterson,henry...
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H A R VA R D U N I V E R S I T Y
Annual Report
2005
Program on Education Policy
& Governance
Program on Education Policy
& Governance
PROGRAM ON EDUCATION POLICY & GOVERNANCE
Director: Paul E. Peterson, Henry Lee Shattuck Professor of Government, Harvard University
Deputy Director: William Howell, Associate Professor of Government, Harvard University
Advisory Committee: Bruce Kovner, Chair, Caxton CorporationCory Booker, Booker, RabinowitzBob Boruch, University of PennsylvaniaJohn Brandl, University of MinnesotaPeter Flanigan, UBS AG Investor RelationsC. Boyden Gray, Wilmer, Cutler & PickeringPhil Handy, Florida Board of EducationRoger Hertog, Alliance Capital ManagementGisele Huff, Jaquelin Hume FoundationLisa Graham Keegan, The Keegan CompanyDeborah McGriff, Edison SchoolsTerry Moe, Hoover Institution and the Department of Political Science, Stanford UniversityLawrence Patrick III, Black Alliance for Educational OptionsJerry Rappaport, J. L. Rappaport Charitable Foundation
Faculty Affiliates: Caroline Minter Hoxby, Professor of Economics, Harvard UniversityBrian Jacob, Assistant Professor of Public Policy, Harvard UniversityChristopher Jencks, Professor of Social Policy, Harvard UniversityRichard Light, Professor of Education, Harvard UniversityDonald Rubin, Professor of Statistics, Harvard University
Staff: Antonio Wendland, Associate DirectorRajashri Chakrabarti, Postdoctoral FellowMartin R. West, Program FellowCarol Peterson, Managing Editor, Education nextMark Linnen, Staff Assistant
Research Affiliates: Christopher Berry, Assistant Professor, Harris School, University of ChicagoDavid Campbell, Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Notre DameRoland Fryer, Junior Fellow, Harvard Society of Fellows, Harvard University Jay Greene, Senior Fellow, Center for Civic Innovation, Manhattan InstituteFrederick Hess, Resident Scholar, American Enterprise InstituteLudger Wößmann, Institute for Economic Research, Munich, GermanyPatrick Wolf, Associate Professor of Public Policy, Georgetown Public Policy Institute
Project Funders and Contributors: The Achelis Foundation The Bodman FoundationLynde & Harry Bradley FoundationThe Annie E. Casey Foundation Thomas B. Fordham Foundation Milton & Rose D. Friedman FoundationInstitute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of EducationKern Family FoundationJohn M. Olin Foundation, Inc.Smart FoundationThe Walton Family Foundation, Inc.
Address: Program on Education Policy & Governance (PEPG)John F. Kennedy School of GovernmentHarvard UniversityTaubman 30479 John F. Kennedy StreetCambridge, MA 02138Phone: (617) 495-7976 Fax: (617) 496-4428Email : [email protected]: http://www.ksg.harvard.edu/pepg/ http://www.educationnext.org/
Program on Education Policy & Governance
N ine years since its founding, the Program on EducationPolicy & Governance (PEPG) continues to attend to itemscentral to the nation’s education agenda. Three reform strate-gies dominate public discourse — adequate funding, account-ability, and choice.
Pushing the first of these, teacher unions are funding law-suits in a majority of the states that are demanding higher,allegedly “adequate,” funding levels, a development of such
rising significance that it has become the focus of theOctober 2005 PEPG research conference.
Meanwhile, the new federal law, No Child Left Behind, isasking schools to make “adequate yearly progress”’ towardstate-determined proficiency standards. When progressfalls short, families are given a choice of an alternativepublic school within the same school district, a quitelimited option. Whether such limited choice can moti-vate school improvement is the subject of a major newPEPG research undertaking.
At the grassroots, broader forms of school choice —charters and vouchers — continue to spread across thecountryside, albeit more slowly than proponents desire.
Always a matter of importanceto the PEPG research agenda,we continue to explore thepromise — and pitfalls — ofthis, the most far-reaching, ofall school reforms.
Through its major publica-tion vehicle, Education next, ajournal sponsored jointly byseveral reform-minded enti-ties, PEPG is reaching a large,growing audience.
We appreciate the support of all those who have madepossible the work summarized in the pages that follow.
— Paul E. Peterson
Three reform strategies dominate public discourse —
adequate funding, accountability, and choice.
ANNUAL REPORT 1
Inside
50 Years after Brown ..........................................................................................2
Advisory Committee ..........................................................................................4
Center on School Choice ................................................................................5
Schools in the Global Economy ..............................................................6
Education next: A Journal of Opinion and Research..........8
Unfunded Mandate? ......................................................................................10
Upcoming Conference ....................................................................................11
New Books and Research Papers ........................................................12
Postdoctoral Fellows and Research Associates ....................14
The School Choice Debate ........................................................................16
A Word from the Director
2 PROGRAM ON EDUCATION POLICY & GOVERNANCE
The Program on Education Policy & Governance hosted aconference, “50 Years after Brown: What Remains to BeDone?” on April 23–24, 2004, at Harvard University’sKennedy School of Government. Prominent lawyers, legalscholars, specialists in public policy, political scientists,and economists gathered together to discuss variousissues relating to the achievement gap between races.The then U.S. Secretary of Education, Rod Paige,opened the conference and three other former membersof the U.S. cabinet — Secretary of TransportationWilliam Coleman; Secretary of Agriculture DanielGlickman; and Secretary of the Treasury LawrenceSummers — participated in the presentations and dis-cussions. The presentations related to a wide spectrumof topics ranging from policy measures that could tar-get the achievement gap to the legal challenges to thesemeasures.
There is evidence that while the black-white testscore gap shrank considerably in the seventies andeighties, the gap opened up in the nineties. But theconference discussions showed considerable promise thatthe gap can be closed within a generation. Participantsagreed that pre-school education, school desegregation,student accountability, and parental choice can go a longway to close the gap.
In a paper presented at the conference, Derek Neal ofthe University of Chicago cited a dramatic increase inincarceration among black men, black-white differences infamily resources such as income, parental education, andtime devoted to children as possible causes of the gap. Hesuggested that vouchers hold some promise in narrowingthe gap since previous research suggests that economicallydisadvantaged black students in inner-city public schoolsgain the most from access to private schools.
The role of accountability in raising student achieve-ment in general, and the black-white achievement gap inparticular, was also debated. Stanford Universityresearchers Eric Hanushek and Margaret Raymond
found that accountability has a positive impact on statesthat attach “consequences to performance.” They showedthat both blacks and Hispanics have lower gains relativeto whites on each of the tests, and concluded that
accountability by itself cannot close the achievement gap.The papers from the conference are to be published in a volume edited by Paul Peterson entitled GenerationalChange: Closing the Test Score Gap, Rowman and LittlefieldPublishers, Inc.
50 Years after Brown:What Remains to Be Done?
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iffe
ren
ces
(sta
nd
ard
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iati
on
s)
Year1970 1975 1980 1985 19951990
Science
Mathematics
Reading
White-Black Differences in NAEP Scores, 17-year-olds
Margaret Raymond, Eric Hanushek, Jane Wilensky, and Ronald Ferguson
ANNUAL REPORT 3
50 Years after Brown
The black-white test score gapshrank considerably in theeighties, the gap opened up in the nineties.
Pre-school education, school desegregation, student accountability, andparental choice can go a longway to close the gap.
Paul Peterson with Secretary Rod Paige and Secretary Daniel Glickman
Secretary William ColemanHarvard President Lawrence Summers addressing conference participants
4 PROGRAM ON EDUCATION POLICY & GOVERNANCE
The PEPG Advisory Committee has continued to meet on a yearly basis since it was formed in 2002 to discussemerging issues in American education and the most usefulways in which PEPG may contribute to its reform. InOctober 2003, the committee met in conjunction with the
School Boards conference events atHarvard. In November of 2004, thecommittee convened at theHarvard Club of New York.
Several new members havejoined the committee, including:Bob Boruch, faculty member of the Department of Education atthe University of Pennsylvania; Phil Handy, chairman of theFlorida Board of Education;Deborah McGriff, chief communications officer for Edison Schools; Terry Moe,
chair of the Department of Political Science, StanfordUniversity; and Lawrence Patrick III, president and CEOof the Black Alliance for Educational Options.
Two committee members were the recipients of the presti-gious Thomas B. Fordham Prize for Excellence in Education.Terry Moe, dubbed “Godfather of the School ChoiceMovement,” won the 2005 prize for Distinguished Scholarship.John Brandl, the “unorthodox Democrat,” was the co-recipientof the 2005 prize for Valor, given to leaders who had mademajor contributions to education reform.
Bruce Kovner with John Brandl
Lawrence Patrick III Terry Moe
Advisory Committee
ExchangingIdeas
Two committee members were the recipients of the prestigious Thomas B. FordhamPrize for Excellence in Education.
Lisa Graham Keegan and Jeanne Allen
Joseph Viteritti and Jerry Rappaport
ANNUAL REPORT 5
PEPG, along with other leading institutions, will establish the
federally funded Center on School Choice, Competition and
Achievement. Other participating institutions include the
Peabody College of Education at Vanderbilt University, the
Brookings Institution, the National Bureau of Economic
Research, the Northwest Evaluation Association, and the
Stanford University School of Education.
The center will receive a $10 million, five-year grant from
the Institute of Education Sciences, which is the main research
component of the U.S. Department of Education.
After a widely publicized nationwide competition,
the grant was announced in September 2004.
Under the grant’s terms, PEPG will examine the
impacts of school vouchers on public schools,
the effects of private schools and charter schools
on student achievement, and the effects of
school accountability systems on political
competition within school districts.
A multidisciplinary team from the
co-operating institutions, including
political scientists, economists,
sociologists, psychologists, curricu-
lum experts, psychometricians,
statisticians, public finance analysts,
and legal scholars, will investigate
these issues.
Center on School Choice
First Federally Funded Research Center on School Choice
PEPG, along with other
leading institutions,
will establish the
federally funded Center
on School Choice,
Competition and
Achievement.
6 PROGRAM ON EDUCATION POLICY & GOVERNANCE
PEPG organized a conference, “Schooling and HumanCapital Formation in the Global Economy,” September3–4, 2004, jointly with the CESifo, a Munich-basedresearch center. The conference brought together renownedscholars from the United States and Europe and, by inspir-ing spirited discussions and communication between them,succeeded in building bridges across nations and schools ofthought. The presentations covered a wide range of topics,including individual and aggregate returns to human capi-tal, equality of educational investments, intergenerationalmobility, peer-group effects, tracking of students into dif-ferent educational programs, equality-focused interven-tions, school choice, and accountability.
There has not been much evidence as to whethereducational opportunities for children coming fromdifferent family backgrounds are similar across coun-tries. Ludger Wößmann of the Ifo Institute forEconomic Research, Munich, presented new evi-dence on this issue for children in the WesternEuropean countries and the United States. Usingcomparable student achievement data across coun-tries, he showed that equality of educational oppor-tunity in the United States was remarkably similarto that in Western Europe. However, there areimportant variations across countries in WesternEurope. While France and Flemish Belgium are themost equitable, Britain and Germany are the least.His findings also suggest that equal opportunitiesfor students from different family backgrounds donot require a lowering of average performance.
The effectiveness of different human capital poli-cies targeted to disadvantaged groups was also debat-ed at the conference. In this context, HesselOosterbeek presented results on the effects of various
policy interventions, such as class size reduction, extraresources for personnel, extra resources for computers,lowering the school attendance age, and increasing thecompulsory school leaving age, on student achievement.Focusing on the Netherlands, he concluded that loweringthe compulsory school attendance age is the only inter-vention that produced significant results. He suggestedthat notable positive effects for the other interventionscan be ruled out. The papers from the conference are tobe published in a volume edited by Ludger Wößmannand Paul Peterson.
Conference Participants
Schools in the Global Economy
ANNUAL REPORT 7
Hessel Oosterbeek and John BishopLudger Wößmann
Schools in the Global Economy
The conference brought together renowned scholars from theUnited States and Europeand, by inspiring spirited discussions and communication betweenthem, succeeded in building bridges acrossnations and schools of thought.
The PEPG journal Education nextrecently celebrated its fourth yearof publication. Education nextanalyzes and influences develop-ments in K–12 education reform and provides a solidplatform to present facts, research, sound ideas, responsi-ble arguments, and valuable policy analyses. The journalcontinues to attract a sizable audience, including thou-sands of researchers; policymakers in state governmentsand in the federal government; and educators in public,
private, and charter schools. Education next articles havereceived a considerable amount of press interest. Thejournal’s stories have been covered in The New YorkTimes, The Wall Street Journal, CNN Money, USA Today,Christian Science Monitor, The Herald-Dispatch, and theOakland Tribune.
8 PROGRAM ON EDUCATION POLICY & GOVERNANCE
An article by James Peyser and Robert Costrell on the truecosts of “No Child Left Behind” has received widespreadattention. Their research has been cited by PresidentGeorge W. Bush, by then Secretary of Education RodPaige, and by major newspapers and periodicals such asThe Wall Street Journal, The Boston Globe, Education Week,and the Weekly Standard. Peyser and Costrell’s studyshowed that NCLB is not an unfunded mandate — thereis enough funding to successfully implement NCLB.
A careful “check the facts” article by Michael Podgursky ofthe University of Missouri on the annual reports of teachers’salaries released by the NEA and AFT was widely cited by the press. In this article Podgursky found that teachers work30% fewer days than people from many other professionsand they typically have a shorter workday. After adjusting for the shorter work year and workday, he found that onlyengineers, architects and surveyors in private practice, andattorneys earn more than teachers on an hourly basis.
Education next A Journal of Opinion and Research
Media Coverage Some Highlights
ANNUAL REPORT 9
Education next A Journal of Opinion and Research
An article by William Damon on the role of schools incharacter education of children has been picked up by FoxNews, the Arkansas Democrat Gazette, the North CarolinaNews and Observer, and the Scripps Howard News Service.In this article, Damon argues that the choices and actionsof schools leave indelible marks on the students and shapetheir characters. Therefore public schools should strive todo their best in guiding students and in helping them todistinguish right from wrong.
The Education next website currently receives 12 million hits a year.
The journal’s stories have been covered in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal,CNN Money, USA Today, Christian ScienceMonitor, The Herald-Dispatch, and the Oakland Tribune.
Circulation, Subscriptions,and DistributionEducation next is available by subscription andat bookstores all across the United States.Both subscriptions and bookstore sales ofEducation next have been growing steadily.The number of stores receiving the journalhas increased to around 600 and bookstoresales have now increased by over 200 %.The journal is carried by the Gale Group and by H. W. Wilson, the electronic databaseused by libraries and booksellers, in additionto a few other library buying services. Anincreasing number of individuals uses anddownloads articles from the journal’s website (http://www.educationnext.org/). The site’s current usage rate is 12 million hits a year,with close to one million visits annually.These numbers rose by over 50% in 2004.
“There are
two things
wrong with the
NEA’s claim
that NCLB
is an unfunded
mandate. The law is
neither a mandate nor
is it unfunded.”
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Sue First,Teach Later
By MARTINR. WEST and PAUL E. PETERSON
April28, 2005; Page A18
The National Educati
on Association, its affil
i-
atesin 10 state
s, and a ragbag of school dis-
tricts have just filed
a federallawsuit alleg
ing
that No Child Left Behind (NCLB) is an
unfunded mandate.If the NEA’s complain
ts
sound hauntingly familiar
, it’s because
Americans have heard
thembefore — 40 years
ago, when Southernsegregatio
nistsdid their
best to evade the desegregatio
n requirements of
Lyndon Johnson’s original lawofferi
ng federal
aidfor educati
on.
Then, recalcitrant school distri
cts com-
plained about an unfunded mandate. Then,
they objectedthat the dollars did not cover
the full cost of desegregating their schools.
Now, resistance comes from those who claim
to represent public-school employees.
Now,
as much as then, the resistance is woefully
misguided.
Thereare two things wrong with
the
NEA’s claimthat NCLB is an unfunded
mandate: The law is neither a mandate, nor
is it unfunded. The nonpartisan General
Accounting Officedism
issed the mandate
claimlast October. The law only provides
funds to those statesthat wish
to receive
them. Any state that wants to reject the dol-
lars — and the rules that accompany them
— is freeto do so. That no state has yet
taken this route provides an on-the-ground
basis for rejectin
g the complaint out of hand.
As for funding, the law does contain this
clause: “Nothing in this Act shall be con-
strued to … mandate a State or any subdivi-
sion thereof to spend any funds or incur any
costs not paid for under this Act.”
Placing this clause at the heart of its
complaint, the NEA offers up three
argu-
ments. The silliest
says congressional appro-
priations fall short of amounts authorized.
Never mind that federal aid to education
reached a historic high in 2005, when spend-
ing reached $12.7 billion. That number, says
the NEA, stillfalls short of the $20.5 billio
n
that had beenauthorize
d in 2002.
This misleading argument attem
pts to
turn a ceiling into a floor, an architec
tural
feat that would leave no room for congres-
sional discretion. As all lawmakers
and union
leaderswell know, congress
ional authoriza-
tions limit — they do not compel — expen-
diture. Neither Johnson, nor Carter
, nor
Clinton, to say nothing of Reagan, signed
education appropriation billsthat reached
their authorized lim
it. Indeed, virtu
ally every
federal program is funded below its author-
izedlevel. Were
the courts to accept the
NEA claimand compel all appropriations to
equal authorized lim
its,the federal defic
it
would immediatelyballoon to levels beyond
the wildestimagination of the most
unabashed Keynesian.
To acquire a patina of credibility, the
lawsuit alsoclaims that money appropriated
does not cover the costs of the new activities
that are required, namely
designing and
administering statewide test
s in reading,
math and science, as well as offering school
choice and supplemental serv
ices to schools
that persisten
tlyfall short of perfo
rmance
standards. But as the GAO and other outside
observers
have alsoshown, test
ing is one of
the bestbargains in education. Nationwide,
cost estimates
have run as low as $9 per stu-
dent, on average, for the type of tests cur-
rentlyused, and nearly
all independent esti-
matesof the costs of test
ing come to less
than $50 per student out of the approxi-
mately$10,000 per student curren
tlybeing
spent on their education. To devote one half
of 1% to obtain information about how well
one is doing is money well spent. Moreover,
it is but a token share of the more than
$1,000 per student that states,on average,
receive from the feds.
Nor are the law’s choice and tutoring
provisions placing much of a fisc
al burden
on school districts. The latest
data from the
Department of Education indicate that less
than 1% of all eligible students have taken
advantage of the opportunityto atten
d
another public school, while the costs of
more popular tutoring options have so far
beencovered
in full by Federal dollars.
So NEA’s legal claimnarrows down to
the tired argument that schools need
more
money to get the job done, this time
rephrasedto say that more money is required
to bring all students up to state-deter
mined
proficiency standards. But since the stan-
dards are setby each state individually,
how
is this a federal mandate?And have not pub-
lic schools — and teachersunions, too —
long beencommitte
d to educating the next
generation? If not, taxpayerscould be
excusedfor wonderin
g whereall their money
went.Spending on schools has clim
bed steadily
for threedecades. In inflation-adjusted
dol-
lars, expendituresper pupil in 1970 hovered
around $5,000: Today, it is over twice that.
Withall the extra
money,classes
are smaller,
those withspecial need
s are given closer
attention, and average teacher compensation
has more than kept pace withthe cost of liv-
ing. Yet according to the most recent results
from the National Assessment of Educational
Progress, 17-year-olds score no bette
r today
than they did in 1970. In other words, the
doubling of real expenditureshas borne littl
e
educational fruit. That is the scandal No
ChildLeft
Behind is attempting to address
.
The law has its deficiencies:
Implementation of key features
is leftto
school districts, many of which are dragging
their heels. The blunt measuring stic
k states
must use to gauge schools’ performance can
be improved. Choices given to parents in
underperforming schools rem
ain limited
.
But those problems can be fixed with
a mod-
icum of the goodwill that historically has
beenthe hallm
ark of our intergovernmental
system. Instea
d of joining efforts to improv
a law designed to help
the most disadvan
taged of Americans, the NEA seek
s to sh
down.
Yet educating the neediest
of our
remains the civil rights issu
e of our
The Southernerswho resi
stedinte
found themselves on the wrong s
ry. Fortunately, most Southern
have figuredthis out. It will b
for all childrenwhen teacher
as well.
Mr. West is a research
asso
Programon Educati
on P
Governance, of whichM
Lee Shattuck Profess
o
director.
URL for this a
http://online.wsj.c
943419249,00
Unfunded Mandate?
10 PROGRAM ON EDUCATION POLICY & GOVERNANCE
ve
n-
hut it
young
time.
egration
side of histo-
governors
be a great day
rs unions do so
ociate at Harvard’s
olicyand
Mr. Peterson, Henry
or of Government, is
rticle:
com/article/0,,SB111465878
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Public school expenditures have seen a steep increase between1970 and 2000; however, there is little evidence of achieve-ment gains of students during this period. In fact, highschool graduation rates have been falling since 1990. Asremedies, several reform proposals have been proposed anddebated. A reform strategy that has been slowly but steadilygaining ground is the adequacy movement. Adequacy claimshave been filed in 29 states since 1989. Based upon evidencefrom student test scores generated by state and federalaccountability systems, plaintiffs in such cases argue thatschools are failing to provide “thorough and efficient” educa-tion required by state constitutions. Consequently, they askthe courts to mandate substantial increases in state educa-tional spending. Plaintiffs have already won in 24 such cases.With cases pending in several states and the federal No ChildLeft Behind law focusing attention on disparities in studentachievement, the adequacy lawsuits are sure to get more andmore prominence.
However, scholarly attention to adequacy lawsuits hasbeen very limited. Whatever little evidence there is suggeststhat although school finance reforms in various states havesucceeded in dramatically reducing spending disparities
between districts, the impact on achievement disparities hasbeen substantially less. This calls for a critical assessment ofthe role of the adequacy movement in garnering improve-ment in student achievement and, more specifically, in reduc-ing disparities and inadequacies in American education.
The conference will address issues relating to the adequacymovement that the existing literature largely overlooks: theorigins of the education clauses in state constitutions, theassumptions about the impact of increased spending implicitin adequacy claims, the appropriate role of state courts inmatters of education policy, and, most importantly, theimpact of an increase in state aid resulting from adequacylawsuits on student outcomes.
To address these very important issues, PEPG hassolicited essays from political scientists, legal analysts,economists, historians, education researchers, and otherscholars. The papers will use a variety of research designs,including careful case studies, thorough historical analyses,and rigorous quantitative research. Moreover, in this con-ference, PEPG plans to bring together participants in sev-eral recent adequacy lawsuits with wide-ranging views onthe topic of adequacy reform.
Adequacy Lawsuits: Their Growing Impact on American EducationOctober 12–14, 2005On the campus of the Kennedy School of Government,Harvard University
Upcoming Conference
The adequacy lawsuit is
changing the financing of
American education. Is this legal
intervention a good thing?
Political scientists, legal analysts,
economists, and other scholars
address this issue at a major
PEPG-sponsored conference.
ANNUAL REPORT 11
12 PROGRAM ON EDUCATION POLICY & GOVERNANCE
Besieged:School Boards and the Future of Education PoliticsWilliam Howell, ed. (Brookings, 2005)
The point of the book is very well brought out in the following excerpts from School Boards Besieged by
William Howell,Education Week,March 9, 2005: After 32 years of teachingin the same public schoolsthat she attended as a child,this winter my mother-in-law decided to run for thelocal school board.… Inlast month’s election, Lindaupset a two-term incum-bent by winning over 90percent of the votes cast.
Some challenges, ofcourse, will come from sit-ting board members whodisagree with Linda’s views
on these matters. But the real hazards lie elsewhere — specifi-cally, with politicians in every level and branch of govern-ment who, over the past half-century, have worked to dis-
place the visions and prerogatives ofschool board members everywhere.
In 1920, public elementary and sec-ondary schools relied on local govern-ments for 83 percent of their funds, stategovernments for 17 percent, and the fed-eral government for less than 1 percent.By 2000, local revenues constituted just 43percent of total expenditures, while thestate and federal governments kicked in for50 percent and 7 percent respectively.Accompanying these funds are increasing
numbers of regulations affecting what schools teach, how theircontracts are written, who is hired, and when they can be fired.
The courts, especially since Brown v. Board of Education,have had a profound impact on public education. After lead-ing the fight to desegregate public schools in the 1950s and1960s, courts now mandate all sorts of education policies.They set rules on which student organizations can assembleon public school grounds, what kinds of religious referencesvaledictorians can make at graduation, what allowances andaccommodations must be made for students with disabilities.State courts have had a definite impact on school finance,setting fixed standards on the levels and types of permissiblefunding inequalities between and within districts. And now,courts are adjudicating cases over whether local school boardscan place stickers claiming that “evolution is a theory, not afact” in science textbooks.
Whereas 19th-century school board members governedvirtually all aspects of public education, today boards must
Learning to Lead? What Gets Taught in Principal Preparation Programs
by Frederick M. Hess and Andrew P. Kelly (AmericanEnterprise Institute).
The new era of accountability and No Child Left Behind hascreated a new and critical role for principals that demandsstrong and effective leadership. In this study, Hess and Kellyinvestigate whether principals are adequately prepared for thisjob. Investigating 210 syllabi collected from a national cross-section of 31 principal preparation programs, they find thecourses to be “severely lacking.” They conclude that the gradu-ates of these programs are not adequately trained to take on thenew challenge of accountability.
(The highlights of this article are available in “The Accidental Principal” by Frederick M. Hess,Education next, Summer 2005.)
The Impact of Charter Schools on Student Achievement
by Caroline Hoxby (Harvard) and Jonah Rockoff (Columbia),NBER Working Paper, May 2005.
Using data from a large charter school system, the Chicago charterschools, this study investigates how students’ achievements areaffected by their attending charter schools. Identifying a good con-trol group for charter school students is very difficult and moststudies are plagued by the problem that the charter school studentsdiffer from the comparison group in observable or unobservableways. This study overcomes this problem by using the fact that thecharter schools were required to select students by lottery when thenumber of students exceeded the number of available places.Relying on random assignment of students and comparing “lotteried-in” and “lotteried-out” students, the authors find that incomparison to the lotteried-out students, “students who apply toand attend charter schools starting in the elementary grades [andhave spent an average of two years at the school] score about sixnational percentile rank points higher in both math and reading.”
Research Papers
ANNUAL REPORT 13
Economics of “Acting White”
by David Austen-Smith (Northwestern) and Roland Fryer (Harvard), Quarterly Journal of Economics (forthcoming).
This paper formalizes the tendency of “acting white” and itsconsequences on black achievement and labor-market out-comes. The authors argue that there is a tradeoff: “behaviorsthat promote labor-market success are behaviors that inducepeer rejection.” Consequently, chances of peer rejection oftendrive individuals to choose lower education, which in turn,engenders lower labor-market outcomes.
Rotten Apples:An Investigation of the Prevalence of Teacher Cheating
by Brian A. Jacob (Harvard)and Steven D. Levitt (Chicago), Quarterly Journal of Economics, 118(3), 2003.
Using data from the Chicago Public Schools, the authors findevidence of teacher or administrator cheating on standardizedtests in at least 4–5% of elementary schools annually. Theyargue that frequency of cheating responds strongly to even smallchanges in incentives. As a result, reforms that garner strongincentives, such as the No Child Left Behind Act, may inducelarger amounts of teacher cheating unless care is taken to ensurethat it does not occur.
Choice and Competitionin American EducationPaul Peterson, ed. (Rowman andLittlefield Publishers, Inc., 2005).
Generational Change:Closing the Test Score GapPaul Peterson, ed. (Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2005).
Common Sense School Reform by Frederick Hess (Palgrave Macmillan, 2004).
New Books and Research Papers
compete with political actors scattered throughout the local,state, and federal governments.
Then there is the recent push for standards and accounta-bility, epitomized by the federal No Child Left Behind Act.While states choose the tests and set the standards, localschool boards must reorganize curricula to advance fixedobjectives that were identified by state and federal bureau-crats. To a greater and greater extent, the purposes of educa-tion are defined from on high, while school boards, and theschools under their care, scramble to demonstrate compliancefrom below.
Should we applaud these trends?… Aren’t the excesses oflocalism (cronyism, corruption, provincialism, and waste)ample justification for legislative and judicial intervention?
To be sure, not all aspects of local education politics arecause for celebration.… But in the push to advance the now-fashionable goals of standardization and accountability, wewould do well to reflect upon the appropriate role of the gov-erning institution that, at least historically, has assumed pri-mary responsibility for the educational lives of children.
For if not the local school board, then which politicalinstitution will hear, and heed, their voices?
14 PROGRAM ON EDUCATION POLICY & GOVERNANCE
Christopher Berry was a postdoctoral fellow at thePEPG during 2002–04. Currently, he is an assistant professorin the Harris School of Public Policy at the University ofChicago and a research affiliate at PEPG. Berry received hisPh.D. from the Department of Political Science at theUniversity of Chicago. He was awarded the WilliamAnderson award in 2004 for the best doctoral dissertation inthe field of federalism, intergovernmental relations, state andlocal politics. In recent research on school size, he has shownthat students from small schools earn more later in life.
David Campbell was a PEPG research fellow during1999–2001. Currently, he is an assistant professor of politi-cal science at the University of Notre Dame, a research affil-iate at PEPG, and a fellow of Notre Dame’s Institute forEducational Initiatives. He received his Ph.D. in govern-ment from Harvard University in 2002 and received the2004 E. E. Schattschneider award for best doctoral disserta-tion in the field of American politics. His forthcomingbook is entitled Why We Vote: How Schools and CommunitiesShape Our Civic Life (Princeton University Press). In recentresearch, he has investigated the factors that lead families toparticipate in a school voucher program.
Rajashri Chakrabarti is the current postdoctoral fellowat PEPG. She received her Ph.D. in economics from CornellUniversity and was a recipient of the Sage Fellowship duringher graduate studies at Cornell. Her current research focuseson school choice and accountability. In recent work, sheargues that differences in voucher designs can lead to verydifferent responses from public schools. She has investigatedthe effects of the Florida and Milwaukee voucher programson public school performance. In other research, she arguesthat voucher design matters as far as student sorting is con-cerned and shows that the Milwaukee program has been ableto eliminate sorting by income.
Martin West, Bradley fellow at PEPG, is the co-editorof No Child Left Behind? The Politics and Practice of SchoolAccountability (Brookings, 2004) and has published articleson topics including school vouchers, tuition tax credits,charter school research, and the effects of class size andschool size on student achievement. He is also a researchfellow in governance studies at the Brookings Institutionand the research editor of Education next. West holds anM.Phil. in Economic and Social History from OxfordUniversity. He is currently a Ph.D. candidate in govern-ment and social policy at Harvard University.
Patrick Wolf entered Harvard’s government Ph.D. pro-gram in 1988, completed his dissertation on bureaucraticeffectiveness under Paul Peterson’s direction, and in 1998joined the faculty of Georgetown University’s Public PolicyInstitute as an associate professor, where he is now atenured member of the faculty. He co-authored a half-dozenjournal articles and book chapters on school choice in NewYork City, Dayton, Ohio, and Washington, D.C. In thespring of 2004, Wolf led a team of D.C.-based researchersinto the competition for the federal contract to study theD.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program, and his team wasselected as the official evaluator of this important newschool-choice initiative.
Sidney Verba with David Campbell Christopher Berry Eric Hanushek, Rajashri Chakrabarti, andDavid Armor
Postdoctoral Fellows and Research Associates
Thomas T. Hoopes Prize WinnersAwarded to undergraduates, along with their academic supervisors, to recognize outstanding scholarly work.
Matthew Mark Chingos, B.A. ‘05,“The Effects of Florida’s A-Plus Accountability and School ChoiceProgram on Student Achievement”Supervised by professors Caroline M. Hoxby and Paul E. Peterson
Brad Michael Smith, B.A. ‘05,“The Results of Political Compromises in Education: The Effects onStudent Achievement of Charter Schools in Milwaukee”Supervised by Martin R. West
ANNUAL REPORT 15
Martin West, Christopher Berry, William Howell, and Jeffrey Berry Patrick Wolf
Postdoctoral Fellows and Research Associates
PEPG’s Postdoctoral Fellowship Program
PEPG offers a one-year resident fellowship
at the postdoctoral level from July to June of
each year. Fellows work at Harvard
University and are expected to engage in
independent projects that are related to the
program’s focus. Additionally, fellows are
expected to collaborate with PEPG’s ongoing
research and programs.
For additional information, please go to http://www.ksg.harvard.edu/pepg/postdoc.htm
16 PROGRAM ON EDUCATION POLICY & GOVERNANCE
The School Choice Debate
The Wall Street Journal, August 18, 2004
“Dog Eats AFT Homework” by William Howell, Paul Petersonand Martin West
[A] recently released study of charter schools issued by theAmerican Federation of Teachers, … after receiving topbilling in the right-hand corner of the frontpage of yesterday's New YorkTimes, was picked up by newsmedia across the country. TheAFT's conclusion: “Charterschools are underperforming.”
Big deal. These results couldeasily indicate nothing otherthan the simple fact that charterschools are typically asked to serve problematic students in low-performing districts with many poor,minority children.
Indeed, the AFT's most telling com-parisons — the ones within ethnic groups— cut against the case it is trying to make.This comparison is vital, precisely becauseprior research has found ethnic differences tobe large. Yet when the authors look just atAfrican-American or Hispanic children, theyfind no statistically significant difference between publicschool students and those in charter schools.
But do any of these findings — within ethnic groups orotherwise — say anything meaningful about the quality ofcharter schools? Not a bit. For starters, one must do muchmore than look separately at students grouped by free lunchstatus, ethnicity or school location, in order to take intoaccount family influences on a child's learning capacity. Allof these factors — and many other considerations — mustbe combined into a sophisticated analysis in order to begin togauge how well students perform.
The AFT study only looks at student performance at asingle moment in time. One needs to track student progresswithin a school over multiple years in order to ascertain howmuch the child is learning. Moreover, nothing in these dataaccounts for the length of time that a charter school hasbeen in place — a factor known to have an impact on aschool's performance.
The School Choice DebateThe New York Sun, April 11, 2005
“Power of the Voucher” by Paul Peterson and Martin West
School vouchers are making a comeback. Under legislationchampioned by Governor Bush, the number of Florida stu-
dents using vouchers, either because they are disabledor were attending struggling public schools, hascrossed the 10,000 mark. Meanwhile, Mr. Bush has raised the ante further by asking the FloridaLegislature to provide vouchers for all low-performing students.
To its credit, [No Child Left Behind] neatlycombines accountability and parental choice.Either public schools must perform well, orparents must be given the choice of another,non-failing public school within the dis-trict. Is public school choice under NCLBenough to promote school improvement?
It is now possible to examine thisquestion systematically in Florida, side by
side with a similar study of the vouchercomponent of that state's own accountabil-
ity scheme. Vouchers remain available toFloridians in all those schools that received an “F”
grade under the state accountability system twice in any four-year period. The voucher threat was expected to give them anincentive to improve in the school year 2002-2003. Did it?
Information from every elementary school student inFlorida for the years 2002-04 allows us, for the first time, toanswer these questions. As it turns out, the stigma of receiv-ing a “D” by itself, motivated schools to work harder thenext year. They outperformed by a significant margin the“C” schools that just missed getting the worse grade. Still,the “F” schools, faced with the threat of vouchers, did evenbetter, raising scores by an amount roughly equivalent tothree to four months of student learning above the perform-ance of students in the “C” schools. They did so despite thefact that these “F” schools had highly disadvantaged, pre-dominantly minority populations.
Meanwhile, we found no impact at all of the threat ofpublic-school choice under NCLB as it was implemented inFlorida the next school year. No harm done, but no goodeither. As Congress thinks about how to enhance NCLB, thevoucher option should be put back on the table.(The paper is available at http://www.ksg.harvard.edu/pepg/)
ANNUAL REPORT 17
Staff Research“Participation in a National Means Tested Voucher Program,”David Campbell, Martin West, and Paul Peterson
“Latest Results from the New York City Voucher Experiment,”Paul Peterson and William Howell
“Efficiency, Bias and Classification Schemes: Estimating Private-School Impacts on Test Scores in the New York City VoucherExperiment,” Paul Peterson and William Howell
“Impact of Voucher Design on Public School Performance:Evidence from Florida and Milwaukee Voucher Programs,”Rajashri Chakrabarti
“Can Increasing Private School Participation and Monetary Lossin a Voucher Program Affect Public School Performance?Evidence from Milwaukee,” Rajashri Chakrabarti
“Do Vouchers Lead to Sorting under Random Private SchoolSelection? Evidence from Milwaukee,” Rajashri Chakrabarti
Papers from the Conference:School Board Politics (October 15–17, 2003)
“The Local School District in American Law,” Richard Briffaultand Joseph P. Chamberlain
“Desegregation and School Board Politics: The Limits of Court-Imposed Policy Change,” Luis Fraga, Nick Rodriguez, and Bari Anhalt Erlichson
“Whither Localism? No Child Left Behind and the Local Politicsof Federal Education Reform,” Douglas Reed
“Teacher Unions and School Board Elections,” Terry Moe
“School House Politics: Expenditures, Interests, and Competitionin School Board Elections,” Frederick Hess and David Leal
“Retrospective Voting in Single Function Elections: SchoolBoards, Test Scores, and Incumbents’ Electoral Fortunes,” Christopher Berry and William Howell
“Contextual Influences on Participation in Local and SchoolGovernance,” David Campbell
“Electoral Structure and the Quality of Representation: The Policy Consequences of School Board Elections,” Kenneth J. Meier and Eric Gonzalez Juenke
“Minority Representation and Local School Boards,” Melissa J. Marschall
“When Mayors Lead Urban Schools: Toward Developing aFramework to Assess the Effects of Mayoral Takeover of UrbanDistricts,” Kenneth Wong and Francis Shen
“School District Consolidation and Student Outcomes: Does Size Matter?” Christopher Berry
“The Market for Hamburgers Is Simple Compared to the Marketfor Charter Schools: McDonalds, Burger King, and Local SchoolBoards,” Mark Schneider, Paul Teske, and Erin Cassese
Education Policy Colloquia Series (Spring and Fall 2004, Spring 2005)
“Common Sense School Reform,” Frederick Hess
“Do Charter Schools Promote Student Citizenship?” Jack Buckley
“School District Consolidation and Student Outcomes: Does Size Matter?” Christopher Berry
“No Child Left Behind?” Paul Peterson
“Impact of Vouchers on Public Schools: Evidence fromMilwaukee,” Rajashri Chakrabarti
“Charter Schools in Chicago: Evidence from a Randomized Trial,”Caroline Hoxby
“The Economics of Acting White,” Roland Fryer
“Educational Adequacy in Massachusetts: Hancock v. Driscoll,”Robert Costrell
“The Efficacy of Choice Threats within School AccountabilitySystems: Results from Legislatively Induced Experiments,” Paul Peterson and Martin West
Papers from the Conference: 50 Years afterBrown: What Remains to Be Done? (April 22–24, 2004)
“Leaving No Black Children Behind,” Chester E. Finn Jr.
“The Course of Federal Desegregation Litigation since Brown:How Conflict Gave Way to Collusion,” Charles Cooper
“Preschool Programs and the Achievement Gap: The Little TrainThat Could,” Ron Haskins
“Black Achievement 50 Years after Brown,” David Armor
“Is Increased Diversity the Answer to the Achievement Gap: Race-Conscious K–12 Student Assignment Plans in the Aftermath of Grutter,” John Munich
“Resources and Racial Skill Gaps,” Derek Neal
“Educational Adequacy Lawsuits: The Rest of the Story,” Al Lindseth
“School Accountability and the Black-White Test Score Gap,”Margaret Raymond and Eric Hanushek
“Education Accountability: Motivation or Discrimination? A Survey of Legal Theories Used to Challenge and Defend StateAccountability Systems,” Jane Wilensky
“School Choice by Mortgage or Design: Implications for theBlack-White Test-Score Gap,” Patrick Wolf
“Delaying the Dream: Legal Obstacles to School Choice,” Clint Bolick
(Papers from the conference on Schooling and Human CapitalFormation are available at http://www.ksg.harvard.edu/pepg/)
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