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From Mother Jones magazine, Monday, January 28, 2013. See
http://www.motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2013/01/big-surprise-yet-another-ed-reform-turns-out-be-bogus . Our thanks to Mike Martin for
bringing this little piece to our attention on the EDDRA2 listserve,
Tuesday, January 29, 2013.
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Big Surprise: Yet Another Ed Reform Turns Out to be
Bogus
By Kevin Drum
Do high schools with higher standards get better performance from
their students? If you require everyone to take college prep classes,
will more kids go to college? The San Jose school district has long
been a poster child for this notion, but guess what? It turns out it
was all a crock:
San Jose Unified has quietly acknowledged that the district
overstated its accomplishments. And a Times analysis of the district's
record shows that its progress has not, in fact, far outpaced many
other school systems'....In 2000, before the college-prep program took
effect, 40% of San Jose graduates fulfilled requirements for applying
to University of California and Cal State University. In 2011, the
number was 40.3%.
My cynicism about the ed reform community grows by leaps and
bounds every time I read a story like this. And that's pretty often.
Here's my advice for what you should do whenever you read an article
about a school that's shown miraculous results by applying some reform
or another (or by hiring a miracle worker of some stripe or
another):
1. Don't believe it if it's based on a single school or
other small sample.
2. Don't believe it if most of the evidence comes from the
school itself.
3. Don't believe it if the reform in question was put in
place only a few years ago.
4. Don't believe it if it hasn't been replicated
elsewhere.
5. Don't believe it unless it's been rigorously tested by
academics who didn't already support the idea in the first
place.
6. And even if it passes all those tests, don't believe it
anyway.
The number of ed reforms that hold up when the evidence is looked at
critically seems to be tiny. The number that continue to work when
they're scaled up seems to be tiny. The number that continue to show
results all the way through high school seems to be tiny. The number
that can withstand critical scrutiny seems to be tiny. And of the ones
that are left, the cost to keep them up usually appears to be
prohibitive.
I understand that I'm being too cynical here. I'm probably going
to get the usual batch of emails from ed reformers telling me that
there are too reforms that really and truly work. And I suppose there
are. But I don't think you can go too far wrong by being almost
boundlessly and annoyingly skeptical about this stuff. Don't worry
about seeming unsophisticated. Just keep repeating that you don't
believe it until and unless the evidence becomes simply overwhelming.
You won't go too far wrong with that attitude.
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Kevin Drum is a political blogger.
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--
Jerry P. Becker
Dept. of Curriculum & Instruction
Southern Illinois University
625 Wham Drive
Mail Code 4610
Carbondale, IL 62901-4610
Phone: (618) 453-4241 [O]
(618) 457-8903 [H]
Fax: (618) 453-4244
E-mail: jbecker@siu.edu