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A Nation Still At Risk? Results From The Latest NAEP

2022
RECORD EDUCATION DROP IS
"ACADEMIC MALNOURISHMENT" 

Latest NAEP Scores Are More Than Pandemic-related

The results of today’s National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) show a massive decline in student achievement. One out of three students cannot do math or read at grade level. One out of four students are not able to perform even at minimal, basic levels. According to the report’s authors, “the national average score declines in mathematics for fourth- and eighth-graders were the largest ever recorded in that subject.”

“This record plunge on NAEP scores is a continuation of bad education policy, pandemic or not,” said Jeanne Allen, Founder and CEO of the Center for Education Reform (CER).

“This is academic malnourishment.”

Continue Reading CER’s Full Statement


2020 RESULTS ON HISTORY, CIVICS & GEOGRAPHY ASSESSMENT

The results of the latest nation’s Report Card reveal that only 15 percent of 8th grade students are proficient in history, and fewer than 24 percent and 25 percent are proficient in civics and geography, respectively.  The scores disaggregated by race are more stark - with fewer than 50% of white students and only between 10-20% of minority students meeting proficiency levels depending on the subject.

The results should startle Americans.

Said Peggy Carr, the associate commissioner of the National Center on Education Statistics which administers the Nation’s Report Card: “The results provided here indicate that many students are struggling to understand and explain the importance of civic participation, how American government functions, the historical significance of events and the need to grasp and apply core geographic concepts.”

Just last fall, both math and reading assessments revealed that student achievement was either flat or dropping for most US students. There had been no significant change from the prior 2017 assessment in math and marked decreases in reading. Reading scores were lower in more than half of the states at grade 8 since 2017.

Continue Reading CER’s Full Statement


Read CER’s Statement on the 2019 Nation’s Report Card.

Presented here are past and present reflections on that path breaking report, along with critical analysis of the past administrations of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) and trends of improvement, pockets of persistent stagnation and CER’s assessments and recommendations for the innovation needed to drive real change. Stay tuned for more analysis on the 2019 winners and losers on what is called the “Nation’s Report Card”.

NAEP & A NATION AT RISK

Nation at Risk – The Imperative for Educational Reform

A ‘Nation at Risk’ issued in 1983 was a national call to action. In 1983, the report declared that “the educational foundations of our society are being eroded by a rising tide of mediocrity that threatens our very future as a Nation and a people.”

In the wake of the report, states scrambled to respond. They changed curriculum, adopted standards, lowered class size, increased salaries and funding, provided modest choices for parents not satisfied with their local public school…(over time they’d provide more); states did just about everything they thought would solve the problems. 

But how did that go? In 1998, a group of education reform leaders led by CER and former Education Secretary William J. Bennett, assembled to review 15 years of progress of the pathbreaking report that once declared US education to be “a rising tide of mediocrity.” The report we issued, A Nation Still at Risk (1998) found the state of education remained woefully inadequate but with promise for the future if we could be bold enough to change the way we deliver schooling and the expectations we hold of all involved.

Last year, on the 35th anniversary of the release of ‘A Nation at Risk’ the latest NAEP scores were yet again a sobering reminder that far too many children and young adults are not well educated, prepared to enter college or the workforce, and ultimately, able to achieve the level of prosperity this nation offers and makes possible for every citizen. 

And now, as we look on the latest results, we again recall the Nation at Risk report’s caution, that “If an unfriendly foreign power had attempted to impose on America the mediocre educational performance that exists today, we might well have viewed it as an act of war. As it stands, we have allowed this to happen to ourselves.”

2019 STUDENT SCORES IN 4TH AND 8TH GRADE READING AND MATH WERE EITHER FLAT OR DECLINED. THERE WAS ONLY ONE MAJOR BRIGHT SPOT - WASHINGTON, DC, WHICH SHOWED GAINS IN ALL FOUR COMBINED CATEGORIES. 

IN ALMOST EVERY CASE, FEWER THAN 40 PERCENT OF OUR STUDENTS LACK PROFICIENCY IN BASIC SUBJECTS, THE GATEWAYS TO SUCCESS IN COLLEGE AND CAREER! Only 35 percent of 4th grade and 34 percent of 8th grade students performed at or above the Proficient level in NAEP reading, and 41 percent of 4th grade and 34 percent of 8th grade students performed at or above the Proficient level in NAEP math. These results reflect a decline of two percentage points in 4th grade reading and 8th grade reading, no gain in 8th grade math, and a one percentage point gain in 4th grade math - which is not statistically significant - compared to the most recent previous NAEP assessment in 2017.

Scores for African-American, Hispanic and at-risk youth are even more troubling.The following graph shows the national average and the overall scores in DC as well as two other state leaders whose robust choice environment suggests higher than average levels of growth statewide, as well as among minority students, being attributed often to charter schools.  (Analysis and data about these scores will be available shortly.)

GET ACTIVE!

To stay up-to-date, to advocate and to help us set this straight, sign up for CER Newswire


PRIOR YEAR NAEP ANALYSIS: FROM THE 2017 ASSESSMENT IN READING AND MATH, RELEASED ON APRIL 10, 2018. 

In 2015 thirty-six percent of fourth-grade and 34 percent of eighth-grade students performed at or above the Proficient level in NAEP reading (2015 NAEP reading assessment).

In 2017, it’s a dismal picture. The results are not significantly higher than 2015, according to NCES officials. Average 4th and 8th grade math scores are about the same.

Only 8th grade reading scores saw a statistically significant 1 point increase across the nation.

While officials point to a 20-point gain since the 90s, a majority of students still aren’t proficient in core subject and the US achievement gap between students of color, at risk and advantaged students remains a gaping hole.

Our nation is nowhere near where we must be to meet the demands of a highly technological world and ensure that our students most in need of getting ahead have a chance to participate in the future. (For more, see About the 2017 NAEP Results.)

THE SUNSHINE STATE IS THE BIG WINNER ON NAEP

Florida’s experience validates the recommendations of A Nation at Risk

While most states had no significant results, the state of Florida, and 2 of its biggest districts—Miami and Duval—had unprecedented gains. Across the board, significant gains were made by low income students and students with disabilities.

That’s because starting in 1999 and consistently since, Florida adopted measures which held schools, students and communities accountable for results. Schools improved, threatened by the prospects of losing funds, and students. Over time, the Sunshine state adopted an expansive array of opportunities for students, including public charter schools, private scholarships and tax credits, innovations in online learning, early college programs and more. Teachers similarly benefited from the policy changes guiding teacher quality, according to the National Council of Teacher Quality.

Last year, Florida led all states on CER’s Parent Power! Index, which measures how much power states give to parents to make significant decisions in the educational futures of their kids.

Click image to view Florida and other states on CER's Parent Power! Index

Florida is not the only state which has improved education for kids having adopted bold innovations. Places like Massachusetts, Indiana, Washington, D.C., and Arizona have made impressive gains in recent years. More analysis here.

This year, several cities opted in to participate in NAEP. There were some notable increases among the 27 urban districts which allowed large samples of their students to be assessed.

Average scores increased in six cities and went down in 5. San Diego went up in both subjects in grade 4, Fresno and Miami went up in math, Boston went up in 8th grade reading, and Philly decreased in 8th grade math. Detroit had a significant drop in both subjects, though officials point out that a difference in the size and scope of the population is different than the last assessment.

No matter how you look at it, though, it’s clear that reforms that ensure more opportunity, more freedom and more innovation have likely contributed to the uptick in some states and communities over time. But it’s not enough.

These are not idle FACTS…NAEP SCORES TRACK WITH LAGGING STANDARDS IN High School.

New data shows that graduation does not equal success (For more, see Correlation Between NAEP & College Readiness.) 

What Should We Learn from the 2017 NAEP Results?

For more, see Important Implications of the NAEP Results.)

WE MUST DO MORE: In 2016, CER cautioned the nation that we were at risk of continued stagnation if we did not act boldly. In A Manifesto—A Movement at Risk, we reminded all that:

“We are faced with a wave of domestic and international turmoil. Education has never been more important to solving both. And yet, the movement to ensure educational attainment for all is at a crossroads. We are losing ground in part because we are losing the argument. And our hopes of systemic change—our progress—will be lost. We will be a nation at even greater risk, if we do not refocus our collective energies and message to connect with the broader universe of education consumers and citizens everywhere.”

The 2017 Results of the National Assessment of Educational Progress are yet another wake-up call. Will we be bold enough to act this time?

Miami To Host National Education Summit

 

(Washington, DC – October 23, 2018)

The Center for Education Reform (CER), the nation’s leading advocate for opportunity & innovation in education, is celebrating its 25th anniversary with a summit and gala on October 26, 2018 at the Mandarin Oriental hotel in Miami, Florida, a state that is the gateway to Latin America and is known for innovations in every education sector. With a slogan of “opportunity, innovation and one America” the event brings together a high-octane list of speakers focused on improving educational results for students of all backgrounds.

The bi-partisan line-up features well known people from Florida – political, business and education leaders – including former Governor Jeb Bush, T. Willard Fair, President and CEO of the Urban League of Greater Miami, Kaplan University president Andy Rosen, Charter Schools USA CEO Jon Hage, Academic President Fernanda Zulueta, US Department of Education Assistant Secretary and former Florida Lt. Gov. Frank Brogan along with many local leaders and educators.

Other nationally recognized leaders in education advancement participating in the summit include former Governor Tommy Thompson of Wisconsin, and current Puerto Rico Governor Ricardo Rosselló. The line up also includes the reigning Miss America Nia Franklin, former U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige, and top education leaders, tech gurus, investors, policymakers, reformers, and postsecondary officials.

CER Founder and CEO Jeanne Allen commented, “Our first 25 years have been rewarding but so much more remains to be done. We cannot afford to let our students fall further behind the rest of the world. That is bad for the students, and bad for America.

“Our summit and gala will be a springboard for new ideas and solutions to move from reforming education to transforming it for learners at all levels.”

More information can be had by calling (202) 750-0016.

To coordinate interviews or to obtain a media credential to attend CER’s 25th Anniversary Summit, please contact Andrew Ricci at andrew@ricconstrategic.com.

25th Anniversary Summit & Celebration

 

THE ROAD TO INNOVATION IS PAVED WITH SILVER

Join us for CER’s Silver Anniversary Summit & Celebration

 

Opportunity, Innovation & One America

Paving the way for learners at all levels – across the continent

 

October 25-26 – The Mandarin Oriental, Brickell Key in Miami, FL

Register Now

This year CER turns 25! During our time the education reform movement has been part of revolutionary changes in what we mean by “school”, and thousands of innovations have been made possible by path breaking discoveries about what works, how people learn, what is possible and what can be done if we are willing to disrupt our comfortable ideas and assumptions.

As in every turning point, it’s time for us all to make a turn in the road we’ve been on. Plan to JOIN US as we look back at the journey, and pave the way for a new road, a road to innovation that unites all involved in the work of transforming education for learners at all levels, across ONE America. Our friends from all the Americas and from our territories are moving fast in ed tech and innovations in knowledge building. Let’s unite to ensure all of our children, families, and students of all ages have access to life-long learning pathways.

This won’t be just any summit. Nor will the celebration be like any gala you’ve attended. CER will ensure that when you join us on October 26th, you will be part of developing strategies that fuse together our collective efforts across every juncture. We will say goodbye to silos, and hello to student-centered learning and opportunities to redesign schooling without the confines of 18th century classrooms. You’ll meet top education leaders, school pioneers, investors, industry giants, and EdTech decision makers, from throughout this continent and the world!

It’s time to speed things up. We hope you will join us in putting a pin in the map of education reform, and in moving from Edreform in the US, to Ed Innovation for ONE America. That is our hope and our focus this October and beyond!

“Braking” News:

 


PRELIMINARY SUMMIT & CELEBRATION SCHEDULE

Thursday Night, October 25th

  • VIP opening reception with special guests and music, Latin American style!

 

Friday, October 26th

  • The Silver Summit convening – Opportunity, Innovation & One America.
  • Click here for preliminary summit agenda.
  • CER 25th Anniversary Gala – Get your kicks on CER’s Route 66– Fun and fancy dinner with awards, music and surprises.

Featuring – Innovator’s Book Garage, EdTech Superhighway & more, Start-Up Roadshow & more!


For Hotel Registration at the Mandarin Oriental: CER has negotiated fantastic rates for you at this premier hotel. Please book online using our group code by clicking here. Guests may also call 1-866-888-6780 to reserve rooms. The reservation deadline is September 25, 2018 to enjoy this special rate.

For Sponsorship Opportunities: To get your name in lights and participate write events@edreform.com or dial 202-750-0016.

SUMMIT REGISTRATION & GALA TICKETS

STAGNANT NAEP RESULTS POINT TO A NATION STILL AT RISK

Recalling Reagan’s words: “When they graduate high school, they are prepared neither for work nor higher education.”

(Washington, DC) — Precisely 35 years after A Nation at Risk was released this month in 1983, student achievement is either flat or dropping for many US students, according to the results of the latest National Assessment of Education Progress, known as the Nation’s Report Card. Scores from the 2017 NAEP administration saw no significant change from the prior 2015 assessment, save for a one-point increase in 8th grade math scores. The scores should startle Americans:

• READING PROFICIENCY or ABOVE: 4th grade – 37 percent; 8th grade – 36 percent;

• MATH PROFICIENCY or ABOVE: 4th grade – 40 percent; 8th grade – 34 percent;

• Math proficiency declined in 10 states.

Officials report that at the basic level, students have made considerable progress since the 1990s, from 50 percent to 80 percent in 4th grade math, for example. However, basic levels are not acceptable levels for competency in work or life.

“This month 35 years ago, extraordinary findings and bold recommendations for action catalyzed a nation. These scores are a sobering reminder that we remain a nation with far too many children and young adults poorly educated, unprepared to enter college or the workforce, and ultimately, unable to achieve the American Dream of living a rewarding, prosperous life,” said Jeanne Allen, Founder & CEO of the Center for Education Reform.

“The NAEP scores show that the need for a fundamental transformation of American education has never been greater, or more urgent.”

In 1983, within days of the Nation at Risk report release, President Ronald Reagan told the nation, “Our education system, once the finest in the world, is in a sorry state of disrepair…13% of our 17-year olds are functionally illiterate, and among minority students it’s close to 40%. More than 2/3 of high school students can’t write an essay.”

“This ‘sorry’ state still largely exists today,” added Allen.

CER Research Fellow Dr. Cara Candal who has studied NAEP trends noted that even when math scores rise in middle school they later stagnate or fall in high school, a critical point in learners’ lives as they seek college admissions and to become productive adults preparing to enter the workforce. “Not only are these flat 4th and 8th grade reading and math scores case for alarm but between 2005 and 2015, 12th grade math and reading scores were also stagnant or showed decline—with very slight upticks in some years and subsequent downward trends.”

The only bright spot in the data released by the National Assessment of Educational Progress today is Florida and Puerto Rico. Florida, in particular, saw unprecedented gains statewide and in two of its largest districts, Miami and Duval counties.

“When innovation and opportunity are kindled, educational success follows,” said Allen. “A Nation at Risk called on us to expand both—it’s high time we responded.”

###

Important Implications of the NAEP Results

The most recent NAEP results reveal two important things:

1) The bar that most states set for students is painfully low. 88% percent of students in this country graduate high school, but NAEP shows that far less than half of 12th graders read and write at or above proficient rates. In fact, NAEP’s assessment are better aligned with international assessments like TIMSS and PISA than most state tests. It’s no wonder Americans turn in a middling performance on these exams in comparison to their peers in other countries.

2) It’s time to be bold and understand the opportunity-based reforms that are helping subsets of students achieve a higher bar. Despite overall disappointment, NAEP reveals pockets of success in some places—places where even the most disadvantaged students are making it to and through college, or taking advantage of innovative and rewarding post-secondary opportunities that afford them entrance to the middle class. (For more, see Education Transformation, Part 1.)

About the Nation’s Report Card National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)—Fast Facts:

What Is It?

NAEP is the largest nationally representative and continuing assessment of what America’s students know and can do in various subject areas.*

When Is It?

NAEP tests different subject areas every year. The first NAEP test was administered in 1969.

How Is It Different?

NAEP assesses the high-level skills and competencies that students have at critical points in their K-12 careers (4th, 8th, and 12th grades). It is not aligned to specific grade-level competencies or standards.

What Can NAEP Tell Us?

NAEP results can tell us about improvements or declines over time in what students know and can do in different content areas. NAEP can also tell us how different sub-groups of fare, how different states compare to one another, and about the progress of large urban districts.

Why Is NAEP Important?

NAEP is known as The Nation’s Report Card because it is the only common measure of what students across the country know and can do. NAEP is more rigorous than state tests and it is “technically sound,” which means it is an extremely reliable assessment.

What Does NAEP Tell Me About The Schools In My State?

NAEP acts as a reality check for states that claim high numbers of proficient students in core subject areas like reading and math. When states claim high proficiency rates but NAEP proficiencies are low, the low standards that most states set become clear.

(For more, visit the NCES website.)


Back to A Nation Still At Risk? Results From The Latest NAEP Recall The Report From 35 Years Ago

Correlation Between NAEP & College Readiness

Lower NAEP scores correlate to lower college completion. NAEP indicates that when the average student graduates high school today, he or she is no more or less proficient in core subjects than his or her parents were in the 1980s. Research shows that proficiency on NAEP’s reading test is a leading indicator of college readiness. We can’t say that for most of the tests student takes today, which is one reason why the majority of students who enter college in this country don’t graduate.

New research by the Center for American Progress finds that in 46 states, high school graduation does not meet the need requirements of public universities. According to Laura Jimenez, the author interviewed for the 74:

“The cost of remediation is high. It’s costing students upwards of…around $2 billion a year in out-of-pocket costs. So it’s a problem. And the root of it is that there really isn’t official coordination between K-12 and higher ed around what it means to be college- and career-ready.”

Here’s a refresher and commentary from the last few NAEP releases:

Results from the 2009 Nation’s Report Card Math Results for 4th and 8th Grade

CER: About the 2013 Release

And how few 12th grade students achieve


Back to A Nation Still At Risk? Results From The Latest NAEP Recall The Report From 35 Years Ago

About the 2017 NAEP Results

In grade 4 reading, 37 percent of students scored at or above proficient. Eighth grade reading was the only subject-area/grade combination to show improvement. Thirty six percent of students scored at or above proficient, up two percentage points from 2015. There were no significant changes in grade 4 or grade 8 mathematics. Forty percent of 4th-graders and 34 percent of 8th-graders scored at or above proficient. These results aren’t very different from 2015 or 2011 except for 8th grade.

The same general trend holds true for race- and ethnicity-based achievement gaps: while scores for black and Hispanic 4th- and 8th-grade students have improved since the 1990s, far too few are proficient in math and reading.

As sobering as these data are, long term trends for high-schoolers are even more disappointing. 12th graders did not take the most recent NAEP, but they have remained relatively stagnant over time. Even worse, when 12th grade NAEP scores were last released in 2015, only 25% of students scored at or above proficient in math. That number was only slightly better in reading, with 37% of 12th graders scoring at or above proficient.

This begs the question: what is going on in U.S. high schools? Are they providing additional learning and skills, or are they erasing the painstakingly slow progress that elementary and middle schools are making?

With these disappointments come a few bright spots. NAEP can tell us how students in different geographies perform. Places like Massachusetts, Indiana, Washington, D.C., and Arizona have made impressive gains in recent years. Florida made historic gains in 2017. So did 6 out of the 27 urban districts for which NAEP provides disaggregated data. One of those districts is Miami.

Localities that have seen stagnant or declining scores (and there are many) can learn from these states and large districts. It is likely no coincidence that most of the places that have seen the greatest gains on NAEP are also the places that have done the most to empower parents with opportunity-based reforms like charter schools and vouchers.


Back to A Nation Still At Risk? Results From The Latest NAEP Recall The Report From 35 Years Ago

Newswire November 28th, 2017

AND NOW, A WORD FROM OUR SPONSOR: IT’S GIVING TUESDAY — GIVE OPPORTUNITY! For nearly 25 years, the Center for Education Reform has fought to bring innovation and opportunity to education. It’s important work, which wouldn’t be possible without the support of donors from all regions of the county and all walks of life.

CER’s unique and revamped approach to fusing innovation and opportunity in our aggressive advocacy to the media and to lawmakers has achieved enormous progress, despite well-funded and increasingly aggressive opposition from teachers’ unions, the education establishment and defenders of the status quo. We’ve been a respected leader and unifying force for an extraordinary national effort that reaches lawmakers on Capitol Hill and in key battleground states.

We’ve achieved lasting support for the critical idea of a scholarship tax-credit initiative that would not only help young students but also provide older students with apprenticeships and skills training. We’re collaboratively promoting personalized learning, which puts mastery of subject matter, not time on task, at the center of the learning process. And we’re developing a model rural-education initiative that can be replicated from state to state to bring innovation and choices to people who have little of either.

On this Giving Tuesday, please consider joining us in our efforts to work to ensure that all children receive the education they need to succeed in life and achieve the American Dream.

No donation is too small. We literally can’t do it without you.

LET THEIR VOICES BE HEARD. By now it’s clear to pretty much everyone that the education establishment and its allies and hangers-on have embarked on a campaign of using race as a wedge to divide the edreform movement and discredit the opportunities and options offered by charters. It’s a nasty campaign that requires a robust response, which is why last fall CER moved quickly to marshal a truth squad.

Called “Voices of Color, Voices for Opportunity,” this project rebuts various myths and untruths through the opinion pages of leading news organizations. The latest voice to be heard: Sonia Park, executive director of the Diverse Charter Schools Coalition. Read her op-ed in RealClearEducation: “Charter Schools Do Not Further Segregation.”

IF YOU HURRY, YOU CAN STILL MAKE IT. The ExcelinEd 10th Annual National Summit on Education Reform is coming up… this Thursday! More than 1,000 education leaders from across the nation attended last year’s summit, and this year’s gathering in Nashville promises to be equally popular.

The National Summit, ExcelinEd’s flagship initiative, convenes the nation’s leaders in education policy to share what works, what doesn’t and what’s next in education. It provides state and local policymakers, education leaders and advocates with comprehensive information on evolving laws, new trends, successful policies and the latest innovations that are transforming education for the 21st century. Be there! And if you can’t, make plans now for next year.

BROADENING THE TAX REFORM DEBATE. Nobody said the tax overhaul was going to be easy, or that reform would be accomplished in a day. But no matter what finally happens during this legislative session, or how slowly the wheels of change may turn, an important conversation has started — including this letter to the editor of the New York Times by CER’s CEO Jeanne Allen. Jeanne calls for tax credits to support community-based apprenticeship initiatives, career and technical education, workforce development and educational preparedness.

TO INFINITY AND BEYOND! An op-ed by the Dean of the School of Engineering and Applied Science at Washington University in St. Louis — “Stop Talking About the Need for Computer Science and Start Teaching It” – makes a compelling case for what we have been advocating for years: that education, in regard to what’s taught and how it’s taught, must move into the 21st century.

Dean Block writes, “At a time when computers increasingly control every aspect of our daily lives — both on the job and at home — the lessons we teach students must adapt to where the world is going, not where it has been.” We couldn’t have said it better ourselves.

Newswire November 21st, 2017

TAX REFORM. The focus on the economy has consumed much of the nation’s attention as of late, but CER is continuing to drive the potential for education opportunity to share the spotlight with economic opportunity.

First the good news: Support for tax credits to enable learners at all levels to gain additional and new educational opportunities is growing. CER has engaged dozens of congressional leaders in a discussion of the importance of allowing a tax credit to benefit entire families – with students able to access new private scholarship dollars and adults to access new apprenticeship and workforce training programs. While that proposed initiative did not make it into the tax bill – yet – what did get through both houses is an expansion of the 529 program, to help K-12students. More needs to be done to reach students most in need, but it’s a good start.​

Now the not so-good-news, but we are optimistic… Charter schools were inadvertently swept under the fiscal savings rug through the elimination of something called private activity bonds, which provide charter schools access to private capital to build facilities, that they would otherwise not be able to afford. Understand that most states do not allow public charters to utilize construction and capital dollars (and no state fully funds charters) (for perspective on the issue check out the this op-ed in the Washington Post). We are supporting the charter movement’s efforts to educate leaders in Congress to not eliminate private activity bonds – and we are cautiously optimistic of the outcome.

BLENDED BEYOND BORDERS. How do we make that happen, you ask? The Clayton Christensen Institute has taken a fascinating look at on-line learning, asking “how exactly the rise in technology correlates with fundamental shifts in teaching, learning, and student outcomes,” analyzing how brick-and-mortar schools in three countries use online learning to deliver content in new, more flexible ways. For ten years the Institute has been studying how schools can use technology to better differentiate students’ needs—i.e. blended learning—and in this study, they analyze data from respondents in Brazil, Malaysia, and South Africa, along with case studies of specific school models. Check out the report here: Blended beyond borders

VOUCHERS BACK IN? Progressives on the left and right have often been aligned on the importance of social justice through school choice. Berkeley Profs John Coons and Steve Sugarman who proposed the original voucher idea in California say it may be time to bring the issue back to California. In an op-ed in The San Francisco Chronicle they point to a statewide poll that found 55 percent of respondents favoring “government subsidies for low-income families to enable parents to choose a private school for their children.” The professors believe that, unlike previous voucher plans, which have been voted down in the Golden State, an appropriately drafted initiative to allow taxpayer funded scholarships, or a tax credit plan to encourage charitable funding of such scholarship, supported by a well-run campaign, could succeed.

DON’T FORGET… NY ED TECH WEEK. Yes, the annual global innovation festival is less than a month away: Dec. 18-20 at NYU’s Washington Square Campus. A packed agenda, a truly impressive roster of speakers, and great special features – including an Innovation Gallery (featuring more than 50 seed-to-growth-stage EdTech investment opportunities, EdTech products, and the chance to talk with CEOs about their companies), Open Labs at innovative education organizations and landmarks around New York City, and small-group two-hour Masterclasses presented by in-demand experts – again make it the must-attend event of the season. Hope to see you there.

HAPPY THANKSGIVING TO ALL. As we head out to spend a wonderful long weekend with family and friends (and hope that you’re doing the same) we leave you a short list of things that we give thanks for this holiday season:

Opportunity, especially educational opportunity – for everyone – so that all kids might someday have access to a school that best meets their needs.

We are thankful to the legislators and policymakers who provide such opportunities,

We are thankful to the entrepreneurs and innovators who ensure that our nation’s educators, learners at all levels and parents have access to the best this nation can muster,

We are thankful to our nation’s leaders, our families, our members, our staffs and all those who toil for educational excellence,

And we are thankful to God for providing us with such bounty, and pray that others may share in all we have.

Enjoy the holiday!

All About PDK’s “The Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools.” Annual Poll

The Annual PDK poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools typically provides insights into how a limited number of Americans think about a limited number of issues in public education. This is the famous poll that reveals how Americans grade their own schools (with most parents giving their own schools As & Bs, just like their Members of Congress).

Across the country, however, there are much bigger issues than polls plaguing our schools. More than sixty percent of US students are not proficient in any core subject. As we ponder the PDK survey results, be sure to acknowledge that without great schools for all students.

THE 49TH ANNUAL PDK POLL IS BEING RELEASED AUGUST 28TH, 2017 AT 7PM. CER WILL OFFER A SPECIAL REPORT ANALYSES AT THAT TIME.

IN THE MEANTIME, HERE ARE SOME OF OUR ANALYSES FROM YEARS PAST.


2013 – Poorly Designed Survey Misrepresents Public’s True Attitudes on Education Reform

Phi Delta Kappa International, in conjunction with Gallup released their 45th annual poll for 2013 on “The Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools.”

For years now, conductors of the PDK-Gallup poll have asked respondents an array of misleading questions, giving a false perception of how Americans view the many dimensions of public education.

Whereas other polls and surveys conducted over CER’s 20-year history demonstrate overwhelmingly positive support for programs that provide parents more choice and ensure schools are held to higher standards, PDK-Gallup polls have typically demonstrated lower support thresholds for the same programs.

So it came as no surprise that the 2013 PDK-Gallup poll again featured poorly designed questions, leading to a misrepresentation of how the public feels about school choice, charter schools and other issues related to education reform.

68 percent of those sampled favored the concept of charter schools, but other polls show even higher rates of support when respondents are given a full and accurate definition of how charters actually work.

Conversely, the poll recorded low support for school vouchers, which was likely to happen when respondents were asked the poorly crafted question: “Do you favor or oppose allowing students and parents to choose a private school to attend at public expense?”

This supposed low support comes at a time when between 85-89% of black voters on recently released state polls overwhelmingly support school choice and why more states are answering the call for Parent Power through legislation.

As CER President Jeanne Allen pointed out in 2012, the phrase “at public expense” creates the illusion that parents seeking more and better opportunities for their children are not part of the “public.”

“Gallup asked if respondents favor parents being able to choose a private school ‘at public expense,’” Allen said.

“But parents who use scholarships to move a child from a public school (failing to meet their needs) to a private school (that will meet those needs) are certainly part of the ‘public!’ They are targeting funds designated to educate their child to a school that will actually do so.”

Here are a few highlights of CER’s Analysis of PDK from just this past decade:

2012 – CER analysis of PDK-Gallup poll:

https://edreform.com/2012/08/cer-president-jeanne-allen-released-the-following-analysis-of-todays-pdkgallup-poll/

2011 – PDK/Gallup Poll Call for Facts:

https://edreform.com/2012/01/2011-jeanne-allen-memo-pdk-gallup-poll/

2006 – CER WEIGHS IN ON PDK: WE’RE SORRY WHAT WAS THE QUESTION

https://edreform.com/2006/03/were-sorry-what-was-the-question/

2004 – PHI DELTA KAPPA/GALLUP ANNUAL EDUCATION POLL: SCHOOL CHOICE AGAIN FALLS VICTIM

https://edreform.com/edreform-university/resource/phi-delta-kappagallup-annual-education-poll-school-choice-again-falls-victim-2004/

2001 – ANTI-REFORM GROUP RELEASES ANNUAL EDUCATION POLL

https://edreform.com/edreform-university/resource/anti-reform-group-releases-annual-education-poll-2001/

Check out EdReform University’s library on Polls & Surveys for more information.