If you were grading school reform, what grade would you give it? I have updated this post to reflect a new rash of national test scores.
“Rash” seems like a good word in this context.
IMAGINE YOU WANTED to lose a few pounds. Most Americans do. (So this might not be hard to imagine.) Now picture some svelte fitness guru. He promises: “Follow my plan and you cannot go wrong. You will lose all the pounds you want. You will end up looking like a bikini model!”
“Rash” seems like a good word in this context.
IMAGINE YOU WANTED to lose a few pounds. Most Americans do. (So this might not be hard to imagine.) Now picture some svelte fitness guru. He promises: “Follow my plan and you cannot go wrong. You will lose all the pounds you want. You will end up looking like a bikini model!”
You excitedly try the plan for six months and gain seven pounds. You waste $1500 dollars on diet supplements, too.
A second weight-loss guru comes your way. “Follow my plan
and you cannot go wrong,” she insists. “You will lose all the pounds you want.”
You do as told again, and put on ten pounds. Even your “fat
pants” no longer fit. (Not that I would know from bitter experience.) You wasted $1200 on diet shakes
and motivational videos.
Eventually, you try a third, fourth and fifth diet plan. Every
time, the gurus promise you cannot go wrong.
Not one plan works as promised.
WELL, AFTER FIFTEEN YEARS of school reform that’s where we find
ourselves, as a nation.
You may not recall, but the push to
“fix” U.S. education began in earnest in 2001, in large part due to test results from
countries round the world. These results came from a test that had not existed until 2000: the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) test. In the spring of that year, 15-year-olds from 32 nations, mostly first-world
countries, took the test for the first time. U.S. students finished fifteenth in reading, with an average score of
504. In math we finished eighteenth with
an average score of 493. In science, America’s teens were fourteenth with a score of 499.
Reporters took a quick glance at results and wrote fevered
stories about how the United States was doomed! Talking heads on cable
news saw the scores and decided it might make compelling viewing to blame
teachers for everything that had gone wrong. School reformers, safely ensconced
in think tanks far from the educational front lines, studied and analyzed and
promised—if we would only listen to them—that they knew exactly how to get those PISA scores
up! Finally, politicians decided they had to be involved. Congress passed the No
Child Left Behind Act in 2001.
So keep those first PISA scores in mind:
Reading: 504
Math: 493
Science: 499
IN 2003 THE TEST WAS administered again. This time, students from 41 countries were
involved. In reading, U.S. scores fell to 495. America’s teens dipped in
math to 483. Science scores were down, with the average 15-year-old scoring
491. After two years of
reform scores were down twenty-seven
points.
The politicians and reformers were puzzled. But they never doubted their great plans. They were absolutely going to work in the end. Just keep listening to us,
they reassured millions of real educators, who were starting to wonder. In 2006 PISA was given again. U.S. reading scores were thrown out. In math, however, our kids scored 498; in science they
averaged 489. In other words, reform was working! Math scores were up five
points! Oh, wait, science scores were down ten.
Overall: down
five!
In a vain effort to improve standardized scores of all kinds, schools across the nation cut back time spent on “non-essential”
learning, like music, art and physical education. School reformers (again: people who never actually teach) promised all these sacrifices would be worth it in the end.
Like the seventeen-year locusts, only appearing far more often, PISA returned in 2009. Reading results for U.S. teens: 500; math: 487;
science: 502. Scores were still down a total of seven points since 2003.
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Scores for U. S. students still looked bad in 2009! They would look even worse in years ahead. |
With the years flying by—and scores refusing to rise—more and more
changes were forced upon administrators, teachers and students. Charter schools
spread like kudzu because charter schools couldn’t fail! Teach for
America was going to work because everyone knew smarter teachers would be a
thousand times more effective than the nincompoops we had in the classrooms now. Tens of
thousands of teachers and administrators were axed under state laws
when test scores didn’t rise. Others earned fat bonuses when scores did. (See: Atlanta cheating scandal.) By 2012 testing was costing states and the federal government $1.7
billion per year.
Surely, by then, reform had to have worked!
Or not.
On the PISA test administered in 2012, U.S. students averaged 498
in reading, 481 in math and 497 in science.
Our teens were twenty
points down, despite following a decade of surefire educational reform diet plans.
Twelve years of abject failure didn’t faze arrogant reformers and pompous politicians. Sure, SAT scores were down too. Sure ACT scores remained flat (that was good news compared to the
rest). And, yes, reading and math scores for seniors on the National Assessment for
Education Progress hardly budged or fell.
The gurus kept telling everyone how great their plans were. By 2015 No Child Left Behind had morphed into “Race to the Top.”
Common Core had come along. After dithering for years, Congress phased out
NCLB and replaced it with the Every Child Succeeds Act. Soon we were sure to see all the great results of a decade-and-a-half of top-down school reform.
For a sixth time the PISA test was administered in 2015.
Now, 15-year-olds from seventy countries and educational systems
took the test. How did U.S. students fare?
THE ENVELOPE PLEASE.
In reading our students scored 497. After fifteen
years of reform and tens of billions wasted, scores were down seven points.
Fifteen years of listening to blowhard
politicians—and students averaged 470 in math, a depressing 23-point
skid.
Science scores averaged 496, still down
three points.
The idea of raising PISA scores had been the
foundation on which reform was built and after fifteen years America’s teens
were scoring 33 points worse.
Teachers were left to ponder several questions.
First, and foremost, had real harm been done to students, all
in the name of reform? Second, did the reformers really know what they were
doing? Third, had all the changes, particularly the insane focus on data
collection, even to the point of curtailing actual time-on-task working
with students, made the job so much more frustrating and so much less
rewarding that perhaps they might not want to remain in the field much longer?
THE ANSWERS, from this retired educator’s perspective
being, yes, no, and yes for too many young
teachers, should send a chill through the education community.
*
I DECIDED to update this article when I saw that average ACT
scores this year were the lowest in two decades. Only 40% of seniors this year “met
the College Readiness Benchmark in math.” That’s the lowest level since 2004.
The average math score was 20.5, the lowest mark in twenty years.
Good
job school reformers, who never taught.
But
wait, there’s more: College Readiness levels in reading also declined to the
lowest levels since current benchmarks were instituted.
Good
job school reformers who never teach!
You
can find plenty of other evidence that the diet plans we’ve been spending
billions on annually aren’t working, plus, as a bonus, you now see teacher
shortages as the real joys of learning are destroyed. In 2000 the average
college bound student scored a 514 in reading on the SAT’s and a 505 in
mathematics. A new writing test was implemented in 2006; and the average score
was a 497.
By
2016 average SAT scores had fallen to 508 in reading, 494 in math and 482 in
writing, a cumulative 30-point
decline. You could almost argue that “school reform” was making our students
dumber.
(The
2017 SAT was totally restructured and scores cannot be compared with previous
test results.)
You
could think of all those billions of dollars spent on testing annually. You
could think of all the anguish inflicted on students, teachers and
administrators in the process. You could think, if you were a dedicated educator,
as most educators are, of what you and your peers could have done with all the
money wasted to improve the lives of children. And then you could look at all
the “progress” reflected in the national test results. Compare results
on the ACT from 2000 and 2016:
2000 2016
English 20.5 20.3
Math
20.7
20.7
Reading 21.4 21.4
Science
21 21
Writing*
7.7 6.5
Composite 21 21
*The writing section on the ACT’s was
implemented in 2006 and, like scores on the SATs, declined precipitously.
So: sixteen years of academic “dieting,” and
scores were down slightly.
Well, then, one last hope remained to prove
that “school reform” was actually working. You could look at scores for the
National Assessment of Educational Progress. Average math scores for seniors
went up three points, between 2005 and 2009, from 150 to 153. The last math
test for seniors was in 2015 and the score had dropped a point. Two points up
over a decade.
The NAEP reading test dates from 1992, when
the average score for seniors was 292. In 2002 the average score was 287. (The
test is not given every year; so we have no score for 2000.)
Yes, good job, indeed, school reformers.