Sunday, September 21, 2008
Recommended ed policy blog
One of my recent blog finds is Dean Millot's blog on the Education Week website. Dean offers straight talk on a range of school improvement topics from a market-driven perspective. His critiques of school district requests for proposals (RFPs) on school improvement topics are usually dead on (and this comment is from yours truly -- someone who reviews RFPs on a daily basis). Check out this blog sometime.
Labels:
blog,
Dean Millot,
educational policy
Educational Policy Institute
Check out the Educational Policy Institute (EPI), a non-profit think tank dedicated to the study of educational opportunity. EPI research focuses primarily on the issues related to educational opportunity throughout the education continuum, from early childhood education to graduate and professional studies, including adult education and workforce development. Specifically, EPI focuses on academic preparation for, access to, and success through postsecondary education, since the global society increasingly demands skill sets that require learning and training past compulsory school. EPI is also committed to research which measures and improves the quality of education these students receive. www.educationalpolicy.org.
Saturday, July 26, 2008
Value-Added Assessment
Found this nice selection of articles and reports on the Teacher Quality Partnership website on the topic of value-added assessment: http://www.teacherqualitypartnership.org/valueaddedassessment.html.
Labels:
teacher quality,
value-added assessment
Monday, May 26, 2008
New Education Sector Report: Waiting to be Won Over: Teachers Speak on the Profession, Unions, and Reform
In the world of educational policy, where the chatter of policy wonks and policymakers often edges out the voices of key stakeholders, it is refreshing to see a publication such as "Waiting to be Won Over" (Education Sector, 2008), which shares the opinions of teachers on a wide range of issues facing K-12 education today. Want to know about teachers' opinions on incentive pay? Burnout? Teacher retention? Unions? Then dig into this great report. A link to the report is provided below.
Use of Cost-Benefit and Cost-Effectiveness in K-12 Education
Hooray for the new Center for Benefit-Cost Studies of Education at Teachers College, Columbia University. The Center is led by the very able Henry Levin, the William Heard Kilpatrick Professor of Economics and Education at Teachers College, Columbia University, and the David Jacks Professor Emeritus of Higher Education and Economics at Stanford University, and Clive Belfield, an Assistant Professor in the Economics Department at Queens College, the City University of New York, and widely published author in the economics of education. Levin and Belfield most recently contributed to an examination of the economic losses associated with high school dropouts in California.
This focus on cost-benefit (and cost-effectiveness) studies in K-12 education is long overdue. Standards-based reforms come in many expensive forms these days, ranging from school choice and charter schools to school-based management and year-round schedules. Most educational reforms face constraints in the availability of budgetary and other resources, and limiting their evaluation to educational outcomes without considering their costs provides an inadequate basis for decision-making. Both costs and effectiveness must be known in order to make good educational decisions. Cost-effectiveness analysis is a proven evaluation tool designed to assist in comparing alternative programs or policies when resources are limited and providing guidelines on which of the alternatives provides the most impact relative to cost.
Popular in other fields, such as health care, cost-effectiveness analysis is, unfortunately, rarely used in education. A panel of experts convened by the New York State Board of Regents in 1995 identified three factors hampering use of cost effectiveness evaluation in education. One of those barriers was the lack of incentives for superintendents, principals, and other stakeholders to use cost effectiveness in decision making (NY State Board of Regents, 1996). Levin (2001) has also pointed to policymakers’ lack of demand for cost-effectiveness analyses as a reason for their paucity in educational evaluation.
Policy could be an effective tool to promote the use of cost-effectiveness analysis. The federal government could incentivize its use through inducements, such as discretionary grants to support evaluation activities for the implementation of innovative programs and policies. This approach has proven effective in promoting “scientifically-based research” and rigorous evaluation through discretionary grants under the No Child Left Behind Act. However, federal grants provide a very small percentage of school revenues and, therefore, have minimal impact on creating a widespread demand for cost-effectiveness analysis.
States, on the other hand, fund a considerable share of local education and exercise strong authority over local spending. State policy on use of cost-effectiveness analysis could have a substantial impact on school district practices. Working on this issue with a powerful bipartisan public policy group such as the National Governors Association or the Education Commission of the States might provide the lever to ensure that cost-effectiveness analysis becomes a widely accepted technique of educational evaluation.
Educational decision-makers need to understand the relationship between policy expenditures and student achievement outcomes in order to make the most informed decisions on how to allocate funding. Use of cost-effectiveness analysis in program evaluation holds the potential to make considerable contributions to informed public discussion on educational policy and resource allocation.
This focus on cost-benefit (and cost-effectiveness) studies in K-12 education is long overdue. Standards-based reforms come in many expensive forms these days, ranging from school choice and charter schools to school-based management and year-round schedules. Most educational reforms face constraints in the availability of budgetary and other resources, and limiting their evaluation to educational outcomes without considering their costs provides an inadequate basis for decision-making. Both costs and effectiveness must be known in order to make good educational decisions. Cost-effectiveness analysis is a proven evaluation tool designed to assist in comparing alternative programs or policies when resources are limited and providing guidelines on which of the alternatives provides the most impact relative to cost.
Popular in other fields, such as health care, cost-effectiveness analysis is, unfortunately, rarely used in education. A panel of experts convened by the New York State Board of Regents in 1995 identified three factors hampering use of cost effectiveness evaluation in education. One of those barriers was the lack of incentives for superintendents, principals, and other stakeholders to use cost effectiveness in decision making (NY State Board of Regents, 1996). Levin (2001) has also pointed to policymakers’ lack of demand for cost-effectiveness analyses as a reason for their paucity in educational evaluation.
Policy could be an effective tool to promote the use of cost-effectiveness analysis. The federal government could incentivize its use through inducements, such as discretionary grants to support evaluation activities for the implementation of innovative programs and policies. This approach has proven effective in promoting “scientifically-based research” and rigorous evaluation through discretionary grants under the No Child Left Behind Act. However, federal grants provide a very small percentage of school revenues and, therefore, have minimal impact on creating a widespread demand for cost-effectiveness analysis.
States, on the other hand, fund a considerable share of local education and exercise strong authority over local spending. State policy on use of cost-effectiveness analysis could have a substantial impact on school district practices. Working on this issue with a powerful bipartisan public policy group such as the National Governors Association or the Education Commission of the States might provide the lever to ensure that cost-effectiveness analysis becomes a widely accepted technique of educational evaluation.
Educational decision-makers need to understand the relationship between policy expenditures and student achievement outcomes in order to make the most informed decisions on how to allocate funding. Use of cost-effectiveness analysis in program evaluation holds the potential to make considerable contributions to informed public discussion on educational policy and resource allocation.
Labels:
cost-benefit,
cost-effectiveness,
educational policy
The Economics of Early Childhood
Economic analyses of early childhood programs are hardly new: the High/Scope Perry Preschool Program cost-benefit analysis is an obvious example. But a new study by the RAND Corporation, "The Economics of Early Childhood: What the Dismal Science Has to Say About Investing in Children," aims to serve as a primer for policy-makers in the use of cost/benefits/rate-of-return analysis in making early childhood policy. A link to the study report is posted below.
Labels:
early childhood education,
research
Saturday, March 15, 2008
National Mathematics Advisory Panel Final Report
This week the final report of the National Mathematics Advisory Panel was released. (See link on this page.) The dominant theme of this report is to put “first things first:” which includes streamlining mathematics curriculum in Grades PreK–8 and emphasizing a "well-defined set of the most critical topics in the early grades"; blending research-based instructional approaches to building conceptual understanding, procedural fluency, and automatic recall of facts and balancing teacher-centered and student-centered approaches; rigorously evaluating initiatives to attract and prepare prospective mathematics teachers and retain effective teachers; and improving the quality of NAEP and state assessments, placing increased emphasis on the most critical knowledge and skills leading to Algebra. The report clearly identifies a path to prepare students for introductory algebra and advanced math: students should become proficient with whole numbers, fractions, and aspects of geometry and measurement.
Labels:
algebra,
early childhood education,
mathematics
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