Entries in CMS (4)

Sunday
Apr032011

Bad Arguments

WCPSS recently responded to the United States Office of Civil Rights in connection with an ongoing investigation of reassignment decisions from Spring 2010. Some shoddy arguments were made in that response. Because the reassignment process has slowed, I decided to postpone my final post on the Wake School Choice Plan to address this topic.

I will not address every misstatement and bad argument recounted in the response. Because of the way the law works, the response recounts some misstatements and bad arguments by individual board members to show through their public statements that they did not intend to discriminate against black and hispanic students. For this purpose, it is legitimate to recount misstatements and bad arguments. So while I have discussed some of these before, I will not focus on them here. Further, most of the arguments in the response, like the argument that the challenged actions have not disproportionately impacted black and hispanic students, are micro-level arguments against something called “disparate impact” that take advantage of the fact that the complaint has not been amended to include the latest round of 2011 reassignments, which almost certainly had a disparate impact on black and hispanic students. These arguments, right or wrong, fall into an “overtaken by events” category that makes them not so interesting outside the legal arena. 

Beginning on page twenty-four of the response, however, are a series of arguments designed to show that “a majority of the Board has reasonably concluded that the district’s use of SES as a student achievement factor has not resulted in marked educational benefits but has imposed unfair burdens on poor and minority students.” Whatever the Board majority may have concluded, and however reasonable it may or may not have been, the arguments themselves are not very good. It is these arguments that I address below.

1. No studies show that SES diversity has improved academic achievement for poor and minority students in WCPSS.

“No studies show that the absence of a meltdown at Shearon Harris Nuclear Plant has markedly improved public health in Wake County.” I’m not a big fan of sensationalist argument, but sometimes it gets the point across. The case against high poverty schools is not as strong as the case against nuclear meltdowns, but the fallacy of relying on the absence of a local study is the same in each case: there is no good reason to believe that things will turn out differently in Wake County than they have elsewhere. The diversity policy retards the growth of high poverty schools. High poverty schools have been studied extensively, throughout the nation, from a variety of angles and approaches, at different levels of rigor, and the answer is clear: avoiding them is a good idea. Individual high poverty schools succeed, but as a group, they are systematically less likely to produce good results for all demographic groups than their low poverty counterparts. Further, most successful high poverty schools require greater resources than their low poverty counterparts and/or rely on peculiarities of situation that cannot readily be replicated or scaled. 

2. Comparison to other North Carolina School Districts shows that the SES diversity policy has failed.

Some fairly comparable school districts, like Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools and Guilford County, are now outperforming WCPSS in important ways. (NB: The WCPSS response overstates the case by highlighting only systems and metrics for which this is true.)

This does not mean the diversity policy has failed. While the comparison districts achieve better results in certain areas despite the absence of a diversity policy, you can’t use this to demonstrate that the diversity policy has failed. It may just show that whatever benefits the diversity policy has provided have, in the last few years and in certain respects, been eclipsed by some combination of things these other districts are doing right combined with things WCPSS is doing wrong.

To make a decent argument that the diversity policy has failed, you would have to show that some aspect of the diversity policy (or, conversely, the neighborhood schools policies of these other districts) actually caused WCPSS’s results to decline or the other districts’ results to improve. The paper does not do that, and it would be difficult to come up with an argument of this kind that is supported by data.

3. WCPSS student achievement data show that the diversity policy has failed.

WCPSS makes two arguments here. First, it points out that the proficiency of students receiving a free or reduced lunch on standardized tests is not “clearly” and “inexorably” correlated with the poverty level of the school. Second, it notes that minority students who attend magnet schools fare worse than minority students who attend nonmagnets.

The first argument means you cannot prove the diversity policy is working via the correlation between school poverty and the educational results for poor children. The correlations are too low, because many things, not just the poverty level of a school, determine how well it educates poor children. But it does not prove the opposite proposition, that the diversity policy provides no benefit. On that score, there is some suggestive evidence to the contrary. If you plot the reading proficiency of white, black, hispanic, and poor children against the increasing poverty levels of their schools, for example, you will see a consistent downward trend for all groups and a notable drop in the results achieved by the best schools at any given level of poverty.

The second argument, comparing the performance of minority students at magnets to minority students elsewhere, reflects the fact that the minority students in our magnet schools are more likely to be poor students—indeed, particularly poor students—than minority students elsewhere. This arises because most magnet schools are located in neighborhoods that are both poor and majority-minority, while most other schools are not. There could be something here, but unless you extract the Asian students from the “minority” category (because they perform as well as white students in WCPSS), then control for levels of poverty in the minority populations, the argument is worthless.

4. The SES diversity policy unfairly burdens poor and minority students.

Two distinct claims are made here. First, WCPSS points out that poor and minority students are more likely to endure long bus rides than their nonpoor, white counterparts and were more likely to have their magnet applications rejected. Second, it argues that longer bus rides show a “troubling correlation” with weaker academic performance.

The first claim is true. Certain poor and minority students pay a price in lost time and choice so that those same students and others can attend lower poverty, less racially isolated schools than they otherwise would. It is always legitimate to ask whether this is fair. It is hard to find an objectively right answer, but I would weigh most heavily the opinions of the communities most affected.

As for the second claim, there is a “correlation” between distance to base assignment and achievement, but it is not as “troubling” as the WCPSS response hopes you will think. Students who travel farther to their base assignments tend to perform less well because they tend to be poorer, and our poor students—like the poor students in every public school system—tend to perform worse, as a group, than the nonpoor.

There is a misperception here, often shared by both sides, that a long bus ride, by itself, could or should improve academic performance. Busing a child away from a neighborhood magnet school maintained at 40% FRL to another, more distant school at 40% FRL will not do this, because the child’s performance should be similar in both schools. What the bus ride does is permit the existence of a system of schools where poor and minority children do not have to attend a poor, racially isolated school.

5. Eliminating the SES diversity policy is unlikely to harm students because the Board majority has established new programs that will close the achievement gap “in other, more effective, ways.”

The Board—the whole Board, but led in some of its efforts by the “majority” identified in the response—has proposed changes in policies and programs that may help close the achievement gap. Some of them, like using objective and documented criteria for math and other program placements and using effectiveness data to place leadership teams and teachers, are likely to reduce the achievement gap. Others, like merit pay for individual teachers, are likely to be a waste of money (see here and here). Still others may be the right thing to do (e.g. reducing suspensions), but their likely effect on the achievement gap is unclear.

None of them has been shown to be more likely to reduce the “achievement gap” than a policy retarding the growth of high poverty schools. More importantly, however, these ideas are in no way inconsistent with the diversity policy. It is entirely possible to implement them without promoting the growth of high poverty schools, so they are not a valid argument against the policy.

Conclusion

In the WCPSS response to the Office of Civil Rights, crafted by lawyers, the above-mentioned arguments are carefully hedged. They are presented not to show their correctness, but to show that they were plausible enough for Board members to reasonably believe them. As you might expect, this subtlety has been lost on or ignored by some members of the Board and the press, who have presented these suspect arguments as conclusive proof of something they do not show.

I have attacked these arguments because they are bad arguments in support of a worse idea: the elimination of a policy that has retarded the growth of high poverty schools. Those who purport to be data-driven have a duty to use data to inform, not deceive. The response fails to do this, and we should condemn the use of these particular arguments by anyone who claims to be data-driven.

At the same time, WCPSS has lost ground in recent years when compared to fairly comparable systems. If the diversity policy did not fail us, other policies necessarily did. It is no answer to blame “growth” for this failing. Growth is a good thing for schools. Just ask Detroit. More importantly, growth is something that will one day return, whether it is good or not. When it does, we must have have a solid understanding of what we did wrong and how to do it better—despite growth—or we will be left in the dust. Some efforts of the ED Task Force are solid steps in that direction.

Saturday
Nov202010

Socioeconomic Diversity and “White Flight”

Has Wake County’s socioeconomic diversity policy driven affluent students away? John Tedesco recently made that claim again in this tendentious column by a Minnesota newspaper columnist:

While the county's overall poverty rate is about 10 percent, its schools are now at 30 percent because the affluent are fleeing to private schools, says Tedesco. The national average for opting out of public schools is about 8 1/2 percent, he says. "Our rate has doubled in 10 years to almost 18 percent. Guess who's left behind?"

A similar claim was made earlier in the piece he co-authored with Ron Margiotta:

In 2000, approximately 9 percent of families with school-aged children had opted out of public schools. In 2010, the percent of Wake County children enrolled in private schools had nearly doubled to 17.5 percent. One contributing factor to this exodus of students has been the continuing uncertainty surrounding school assignment and school calendar.

Are these things true? No. As explained below, the schools are not at 30% poverty. The affluent are not fleeing to private schools due to the diversity policy, assignment uncertainty, calendar changes, or anything else. No one is fleeing, because Wake County’s opt-out rate is essentially unchanged and has not doubled in ten years from 9% to 18%.

Let’s take a look at the details.

The schools are not at 30% poverty.

According to Wake County Quickfacts from the US Census Bureau, 9.2% of persons in Wake County were below the poverty level in 2008, the year used by the Bureau. The number has likely risen a bit since due to the condition of the economy.

For 2009-10, the last school year for which complete demographic information has been published by WCPSS, the percentage of children eligible for a free or reduced price meal (our “FRL percentage”) is 31.2%. 

Does this show that the public schools have three times as many poor children as the population at large? No. The two numbers measure different things. According to the United States Department of Agriculture, children were eligible for a free or reduced price lunch in 2009 at income levels of up to 185% of the poverty line.

More people have incomes of up to 185% of the poverty line than have income of up to 100% of the poverty line. How many more? We can approximate. The Census Bureau reports that in 2008, 13% of households made less than $15,000. This conservatively estimates the income range of persons in poverty, who numbered 14.6% that year. Multiply the upper end of the range, $15,000, by 185%, and you are looking at household incomes of up to $27,750. From that same census data, we know that 27.9% of households made less than $27,500. In other words, we can estimate that twice as many households (27.9% versus 14.6%) qualify for free or reduced price meals as fall below the poverty level. Put another way, we can estimate that about half of the FRL percentage falls below the poverty line, or 16%.

The affluent are not fleeing to private schools due to the diversity policy, assignment uncertainty, calendar changes, or anything else.

So, about 16% of kids in our schools fall below the poverty line, while about 9% of the overall population falls below it. Does this difference between the actual number and the expected number mean that the affluent are fleeing the public schools? Again, no.

No one is fleeing, because Wake County’s opt-out rate (the percentage attending private or home school) is essentially unchanged in the last decade. It has not doubled in ten years from 9% to 18%. It has risen from 13.3% to 14.5%. Based on national data, 14% opting out is the number you would expect when you adjust for Wake’s poverty distribution.

As this national data make clear, private schools everywhere disproportionately serve the rich, which necessarily implies that public schools everywhere disproportionately serve the poor. But comparison of Wake County’s opt-out percentage to national norms shows that Wake County has not driven away any more (or fewer) than average.

Thinking harder.

So here’s your next question to think about. Tedesco often promotes the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools as a “neighborhood schools” model. The poverty level in Mecklenburg County is 10.9%. The poverty level in CMS is about 26% (1/2 of the FRL percentage, 53%). The expected value for CMS differs from the actual by 15%, not the 7% you see in Wake. And we haven’t even looked at the stark differences in surrounding county developments yet.

So if assignment plans determine who opts out of our public schools, and your goal is to retain affluent students, which plan would you rather have?

Monday
Oct112010

Demographic Comparison of WCPSS and CMS

The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools have produced impressive proficiency gains for their poor, black, and hispanic students, who now outperform their counterparts in Wake. They have done so in an environment with more poor, black, and hispanic students. If one believes CMS has done this in spite of the concentrated poverty resulting from neighborhood schools, rather than because of some benefit conferred by them, then WCPSS can obviously learn some things from CMS.

Watch out, though. Mecklenburg County has a poverty level (10.9%) very similar to Wake County's (9.2%). Despite this, far more users of Mecklenburg County's public schools receive free lunch (50.9% versus 31.2%). See chart. While the white residents in both counties are less likely to use the public schools than their counterparts who are black or hispanic, the difference in Mecklenburg County is much more striking. In Mecklenburg, 54.1% of the population is white, but only 33.5% of the students are white. In Wake, it is 64.2% versus 51%. This appears to mean that far more nonpoor whites are opting out of public school in Charlotte than in Wake. This probably isn't good for public support of the public schools.

Sunday
Oct032010

N&O Viewpoint Piece

Today's News & Observer printed a viewpoint piece by J.B. Buxton that identifies the problem with assuming that neighborhood schools will bolster achievement: the evidence does not support it. As he puts it, by reference to an oft-cited example:

Charlotte's student assignment plan was not part of the solution - it was part of the problem. Progress has resulted from actions taken to address challenges created in part by the assignment plan. It has also meant higher levels of local spending in Charlotte than in Wake ($429 more per student according to latest state data).

Read more: http://www.newsobserver.com/2010/10/03/714595/a-better-course-for-wake-schools.html#ixzz11LoYUODC.

Some studies support the conclusion that parental involvement enhances achievement. Others do not. Where an effect is found, however, it generally stems from parents more actively encouraging their children to do homework, not from visiting their school. I do not know of any research showing that "neighborhood schools" affect parental involvement of this type or enhance achievement in another way.

Studies do not show that neighborhood schools are bad, either. But they do confirm that concentrating poverty or isolating black and hispanic students, as the current proposal would, adversely affects achievement for all groups in the areas where those concentrations would exist. WCPSS school proficiency data supports this conclusion too.

This plan significantly increases the concentration of poverty and the degree of racial isolation in the Southeast Raleigh/Enloe Zone, the Sanderson/Millbrook Zone, and the Athens Drive Zone.