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Thursday, April 17, 2008
Dr. Matthew Ladner :: Townhall.com Columnist
Jeb Bush's Reforms Improved Public Schools
by Dr. Matthew Ladner
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Is demography destiny?

If so, say some experts, states with growing Hispanic populations seem doomed to fail, weighed down with ineffective school systems and abysmal test scores. One academic goes so far as to predict the Southwest will become the “Appalachia of the 21st Century.” His logic was simple: Hispanic populations are growing rapidly, Hispanic students under-perform academically, southwestern states are doomed.

Balderdash.

States can overcome this challenge. Exhibit A: Florida under Jeb Bush and Charlie Crist. Startling statistics show that with abundant school choice and systemic education reform, Florida’s Hispanic students already eclipse the average academic performance of many states.

Tackling education reform in Florida is a tougher nut to crack than in Massachusetts or New Hampshire. Low-income students make up more than half the K-12 student body, with a “majority minority” ethnic mix. Florida’s per student funding is below the national average.

Governor Jeb Bush pushed through a bracing dual strategy of accountability from both the top down (high-stakes state testing) and bottom up (widespread parental choice) in 1999. Governor Bush’s A+ Plan emphasized standards for the schools and transparency for parents. Schools faced real consequences for prolonged failure, including school vouchers for their students.

Bush’s school choice strategy also included the creation of the nation’s largest voucher program--the McKay Scholarship Program--for students with disabilities and the “Step Up for Students” tax credit for economically disadvantaged children. Today, 820 Florida private schools educate 19,000 children with disabilities through McKay. A similar number of low-income parents exercise choice through the tax credit program. Florida also has a vigorous and growing charter school movement, with 375 charter schools educating over 106,000 students.

So what does Florida have to show for this tough mixture of testing and parental choice? The best source of data to answer this question comes from the federal government. The National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) tests representative samples of students in the states on a variety of subjects. NAEP provides the nation’s most reliable and respected source of K-12 testing data.

Children who do not learn to read in the early grades almost never recover academically, falling further and further behind with each passing grade. Reaching the middle school years, they literally cannot read their textbooks and often become academically frustrated and disruptive. Hopelessly behind, these children begin dropping out of school in large numbers in the eighth grade.

Researchers, therefore, focus heavily on fourth grade reading scores as a bellweather for the effectiveness of schools. In 1998, a stunning 47 percent of Florida fourth graders were on this dismal track, scoring “below basic” on the NAEP reading test. In 2007, 70 percent of Florida fourth graders scored basic or above on reading.

The percentage of Florida children failing to master basic literacy dropped by 36 percent in less than 10 years--a remarkable achievement. Meanwhile, the percentage of fourth graders scoring “proficient” increased by 54 percent, and the percent scoring “advanced” (the highest level of achievement) doubled, from four to eight percent.

Best of all, improvements among Hispanic and African American students helped to drive the overall results. Scores of Florida’s Hispanic students have soared in recent years. Florida’s Hispanic students now have the second highest reading scores in the nation, and African Americans score fourth highest. Continued...

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About The Author
Dr. Matthew Ladner is vice president of research for the Goldwater Institute and an expert on educational reform and school choice. Dr. Ladner holds a Ph.D. from the University of Houston.
 
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Subject: Florida data contradicts
While Mr. ladner may choose to downplay the role of demographics in Florida's A+ plan, data
contradicts such a stance. The work of Dr. Charles Morris of Okaloosa County and Professor Tschinkel are each authors whose work would contradict Mr. Ladner. Since the A+ plan places so much emphasis ona single indicator, an
absolute FCAT score, it is susceptible to the correlation between achievement and socioeconomic status. One can only wonder if the true purpose of the A+ plan is to cahieve political motives since it appears not to be
to measure instructional effectiveness.

Milwaukee and Cleveland
religiouslib-

Okay, you had me confused. The Milwaukee Parental Choice Program was established by the Wisconsin legislature. I had taken what you wrote to mean that it had been created by the district. The program also did not cease after 5 years, but continues to this day.

Multiple evaluations from scholars at Harvard, Princeton and other places found that participants scored significantly better than children who had applied for the program but did not win lottery admission. Even John Witte, who is the source of the 5 year evaluation you cite, came to endorse the program in a later book he wrote on the subject.

The "expected ruling" in 2002 came down in favor of the Cleveland program in the Zelman decision, that found so long as parents chose between religious and non-religious options, there was no violation of the 1st Amendment. The 1st Amendment calls for neutrality towards religion and religious institutions, not hostility and discrimination.

By the way, the suburban public districts around Cleveland can receive vouchers twice as large as those received by private schools, and mysteriously, none of them have ever had a single empty seat for inner city Cleveland kids.

Florida's NAEP score improvement among disadvantaged children speak for themselves. You don't need to trust me, look them up on the NAEP website.
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