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Even the best educated in America have trouble
competing with the mediocre of developed and developing countries around the
world.(Via Black Star Project)
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When the Best is Mediocre
Developed countries far outperform our most
affluent suburbs
By Jay P. Greene and
Josh B. McGee
Winter 2012 / Vol. 12,
No. 1
(This article is
excerpted and is not the complete article. Click Here to view complete article)
American education has
problems, almost everyone is willing to concede, but many think those
problems are mostly concentrated in our large urban school districts. In the
elite suburbs, where wealthy and politically influential people tend to live,
the schools are assumed to be world-class.
Unfortunately, what
everyone knows is wrong. Even the most elite suburban school districts often
produce results that are mediocre when compared with those of our
international peers. Our best school districts may look excellent alongside
large urban districts, the comparison state accountability systems encourage,
but that measure provides false comfort. America's elite suburban students
are increasingly competing with students outside the United States for
economic opportunities, and a meaningful assessment of student achievement
requires a global, not a local, comparison.
We developed the
Global Report Card (GRC) to facilitate such a comparison. The GRC enables
users to compare academic achievement in math and reading between 2004 and
2007 for virtually every public school district in the United States with the
average achievement in a set of 25 other countries with developed economies
that might be considered our economic peers and sometime competitors. The
main results are reported as percentiles of a distribution, which indicates
how the average student in a district performs relative to students
throughout the advanced industrialized world. A percentile of 60 means that
the average student in a district is achieving better than 59.9 percent of
the students in our global comparison group. (Readers can find all of the
results of the Global Report Card at http://globalreportcard.org. The web site
contains a full description of the method by which we calculated the results.
For a summary, see the methodology sidebar.)
For the purposes of
this article, we focus on the 2007 math results, although the GRC contains
information for both math and reading between 2004 and 2007. We focus on 2007
because it is the most recent data set, and we focus on math because it is
the subject that provides the best comparison across countries and is most
closely correlated with economic growth. Readers should feel free to consult
the GRC web site to find reading results as well as results for other years.
Results from Affluent
Suburbs Nationwide
Affluent suburban
districts may be outperforming their large urban neighbors, but they fail to
achieve near the top of international comparisons (see Figure 1). White
Plains, New York, in suburban Westchester County, is only at the 39th
percentile in math relative to our global comparison group. Grosse Point,
Michigan, outside of Detroit, is at the 56th percentile. Evanston, Illinois,
the home of Northwestern University outside of Chicago, is at the 48th
percentile in math. The average student in Montgomery County, Maryland, where
many of the national government leaders send their children to school, is at
the 50th percentile in math relative to students in other developed
countries. The average student in Fairfax, Virginia, another suburban refuge
for government leaders, is at the 49th percentile. Shaker Heights, Ohio,
outside of Cleveland, is at the 50th percentile in math. The average student
in Lower Merion, Pennsylvania, near Philadelphia, is at the 66th percentile.
Ladue, Missouri, a wealthy suburb of St. Louis, is at the 62nd percentile.
And the average student in Plano, Texas, near Dallas, is at the 64th
percentile in math relative to our global comparison group.
All of these
communities are among the wealthiest in the United States. All are
overwhelmingly white in their population. All of them are thought of as
refuges from the dysfunction of our public school system. But the sad reality
is that in none of them is the average student in the upper third of math
achievement relative to students in other developed countries. Most of them
are barely keeping pace with the average student in other developed
countries, despite the fact that the comparison is to all students in the
other countries, some of which have a per-capita gross domestic product that
is almost half that of the United States. In short, many of what we imagine
as our best school districts are mediocre compared with the education systems
serving students in other developed countries.
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Pockets of Excellence
While many affluent
suburban districts have lower achievement than we might expect, some
districts are producing very high achievement even when compared with that of
students in other developed countries. For example, the average student in
the Pelham school district in Massachusetts is at the 95th percentile in
math. That means that if we were to relocate Pelham to another developed
country in our comparison group, the average student in Pelham would
outperform 95 percent of the students in math. That's very impressive.
Of course, Pelham is a
small district that is home to Amherst College, among other institutions of
higher learning, and serves a rather select group of students. But not all
college-town school districts are equally high achieving. As we have already
seen, Evanston, Illinois, is at the 48th percentile in math in a global
comparison. Palo Alto, California, the home of Stanford University, is at the
64th percentile. And the average student in Ann Arbor, Michigan, home to the
University of Michigan, is at the 58th percentile in math relative to
students in other developed countries. So, the 95th percentile math
achievement in Pelham is outstanding, even for college towns.
Spring Lake, New
Jersey, has a similarly impressive record of having the average student at
the 91st percentile in math. It is a very small and affluent community on the
New Jersey shore that has somehow escaped the influence of Snooki and The
Situation. Waconda, Kansas, a small rural community, also is at the 91st
percentile. Highland Park, Texas, an affluent community near Dallas, is at
the 88th percentile.
Interestingly, of the
top 20 U.S. public-school districts in math achievement, 7 are charter
schools (some states treat charter schools as separate public-school
districts). And most of the 13 traditional districts remaining are in rural
communities rather than in a large suburban "refuge" from urban
education ills.
Pools of Failure
In total, only 820 of
the 13,636 public-school districts for which we have 2007 math results had
average student achievement that would be among the top third of student
performance in other developed countries. That is, 94 percent of all U.S.
school districts have average math achievement below the 67th percentile.
There aren't that many truly excellent districts out there.
Of the 13,636
districts, 9,339, or 68 percent, have average student math achievement that
is below the 50th percentile compared with that of the average student in
other developed countries. Most of our large school districts are well below
the 50th percentile. This is especially alarming, because these
lower-performing large districts comprise a much greater share of the total
student population than do the relatively small higher-performing districts.
The average student in
the Washington, D.C., school district is at the 11th percentile in math
relative to students in other developed countries. In Detroit, the average
student is at the 12th percentile. In Milwaukee, the average student is at
the 16th percentile. Cleveland is at the 18th percentile. The average student
in Baltimore is at the 19th percentile in math relative to students in other
developed countries. In Los Angeles, the average student is at the 20th
percentile. The average student in Chicago is at the 21st percentile in math.
Atlanta is at the 23rd percentile. The average student in New York City is at
the 32nd percentile in math. And in Miami-Dade County, the average student is
at the 33rd percentile in math.
Not 1 of the largest
20 school districts is above the 50th percentile in math relative to other
developed countries. Those districts contain almost 5.2 million students or
more than 10 percent of the country's schoolchildren. The rare and small
pockets of excellence in charter schools and rural communities are
overwhelmed by large pools of failure.
No Refuge
The elites, the
wealthy families that have a disproportionate influence on politics, clearly
recognize the dysfunction of large urban school districts and have sought
refuge in affluent suburban districts for their own children. But the reality
is that there are relatively few pockets of excellence to which these
families can flee.
In four states, there
is not a single traditional district with average student achievement above
the 50th percentile in math. In 17 states, there is not a single traditional
district with average achievement in the upper third relative to our global
comparison group. And apart from charter school districts, in over half
of the states, there are no more than three traditional districts in which
the average achievement would be in the upper third.
The elites in those
states have almost nowhere to find an excellent public education for their
children. But state accountability systems and the desire to rationalize the
lack of quality options have encouraged the elites to compare their affluent
suburban districts to the large urban ones in their state. These
inappropriate comparisons have falsely reassured them that their own school
districts are doing well.
This false reassurance
has also perhaps undermined the desire among the elites to engage in dramatic
education reform. As long as the elites hold onto the belief that their own
school districts are excellent, they have little desire to push for the kind
of significant systemic reforms that might improve their districts as well as
the large urban districts. They may wish the urban districts well and hope
matters improve, but their taste for bold reform is limited by a false
contentment with their own situation.
But the elites should
not take comfort from the stronger performance of affluent suburban districts
relative to large urban districts. As the Global Report Card reveals, even
our best public-school districts are mediocre when compared with the
achievement of students in a set of countries with developed economies.
Of course, the Global
Report Card does not isolate the extent to which schools add or detract from
student performance. Factors from student backgrounds, including their
parents, communities, and individual characteristics, have a strong influence
on achievement. But the GRC does tell us about the end result for student
achievement of all of these factors, schools included. And that end result,
even in our best districts, is generally disappointing.
Jay P. Greene is
professor of education reform at the University of Arkansas and a fellow at
the George W. Bush Institute. Josh B. McGee is vice president for public
accountability initiatives at the Laura and John Arnold Foundation.
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Wednesday, October 26, 2011
When the Best is Mediocre
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