tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25541994.post4192037490735744883..comments2024-03-02T15:23:18.091-05:00Comments on D-Ed Reckoning: A Bridge Too FarKDeRosahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06853211164976890091noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25541994.post-8830865493880986892010-05-15T13:14:03.173-04:002010-05-15T13:14:03.173-04:00Both "integration" and "vouchers&qu...Both "integration" and "vouchers" are political/social/economically motivated initiatives. Nothing wrong with that. What's wrong is to think for a minute that they will "improve student performance." <br /><br />With <br />--the great variability withing classes, within schools, within, districts, and within states<br /><br />--the lack of attention to any aspect of the instruction that's actually delivered<br /><br />--prevailing comparative research methodology in education<br /><br />--the instructional insensitivity of measures of "student performance<br /><br />there is no chance under the sun that either of the two can be shown to have any reliable effect.<br /><br />It really doesn't require any empirical research to arrive at this conclusion. A thought experiment should suffice. It took decades to dispel the integration notion (and some people still didn't get the message). Vouchers (masked as Charters or Scholarships)just haven't produced the successes that are being promoted. Even the poster-school examples do not stand up to close scrutiny.<br /><br />For all the "gee whiz" Charter Schools one can find equivalent "gee whiz" public schools. But the further away you get from the unique local condition and the unique personnel involved, the less replicable. <br /><br />The jargon is "they don't scale." Actually, there was nothing "there." That finding has been replicated over and over since the days of Follow Through and most recently in the 13-year "Study of Instructional Improvement:"<br /><br /><a rel="nofollow">http://www.cpre.org/images/stories/cpre_pdfs/sii%20final%20report_web%20file.pdf</a><br /><br /><i>we argue that design-based school improvement tends to work best—not when the process encourages local educators to invent instructional and organizational solutions to the practical problems of teaching and learning that they face—but rather when it helps teachers learn how to use a well-specified set of practices through extensive supports</i><br /><br />Educational policy makers and policy wannabees are ignoring solid research and chasing bad research. Not smart.Dick Schutzhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09815175767173164494noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25541994.post-80886129381799404062010-05-15T11:37:28.341-04:002010-05-15T11:37:28.341-04:00Are you sure about that, Dick?
Disclaimer: I hav...<a href="http://jaypgreene.com/2010/04/07/vouchers-and-the-rising-tide/" rel="nofollow">Are you sure about that, Dick?</a><br /><br />Disclaimer: I haven't looked at the underlying data.KDeRosahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06853211164976890091noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25541994.post-25129660282262396272010-05-15T11:22:09.508-04:002010-05-15T11:22:09.508-04:00PPPS. A train wreck of two "Classic Confirmat...PPPS. A train wreck of two "Classic Confirmation Biases" here. Neither school integration nor vouchers improves student performance. Why anyone would think that either or both would "should baffle the media."Dick Schutzhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09815175767173164494noreply@blogger.com