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The Legacy of Milton and Rose
Friedman’s Free to Choose
Economic Liberalism at the Turn of the 21st Century
October 23–24,
2003
A Conference Hosted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Session 1 Q&A
Q: How do you deal with the problem
of “teaching to the test”? Specifically,
whether testing as it is done in Texas will lead to
too much exclusive teaching to the test at the expense
of education in the broader sense?
A: [Paul Peterson] Nobody could
teach to our tests because we gave them outside the
regular school day on a Saturday morning and neither
the public nor the private school used that test. So
our study is not contaminated by that problem. Rick
can address the broader issue.
A2: [Eric Hanushek] Well, let
me give two responses to that question. The first is
that teaching to the test has gotten a very bad name
in my opinion. When I teach a class, I teach to the
test in the sense that I have certain things that I
want the students to know and I test those things. So,
at one level that’s what we want. That’s
why we’re doing the accountability system. If
we have a test that is well designed to measure the
goals and standards we have for our students, then let’s
have teachers teach to that test. The reason why it’s
gotten a bad name is that people are concerned that
either the tests are not good enough or that they are
on too narrow of a range of issues or subjects and we
want more out of our school. Both concerns are legitimate.
The current tests have not been as good as we might
want although, for example, Texas has revamped their
tests. The former test, the TASP test, I think was pretty
good at the bottom end but not very good at the top
end, so there was some distortion there. That’s
been revised and we’ll wait and see how well they
did. But secondly, what we found is that we have not
provided the basic skills to a large portion of the
population in the past and that’s what the tests
are doing: saying let’s provide more of the basic
math and reading and writing skills and science skills
that students need to succeed in society. So part of
that teaching to the test is absolutely by design and
that’s exactly what we want.
Q: Two more related questions on the
differential performance of the U.S. students versus
their foreign competitors of these international comparisons.
Do you have any insights into why students outside the
United States do so much better on standardized tests,
especially given the extensive state involvement in
education in other countries? Or are there actually
more private schools available to the students in these
other countries?
A: [Hanushek] Well, this has been
a puzzle frankly. You have very small numbers of differences
in scores across countries, and there are lots of things
that differ between Japan and the U.S., or between France
and the U.S., so it’s very hard to take the international
tests and say what accounts for the differences. We
know that a lot of cultures place a lot more emphasis
on education in the home than the average in the U.S.
So that’s one of the explanations of what’s
going on with the East Asian countries systematically
doing better than the U.S. But on the other hand, there
are other complications. The East Asian countries provide
for national examinations that determine who gets into
what college, which is very important. Students have
an incentive to work towards those tests, whereas in
the U.S. we don’t have the same kinds of incentives.
But then there are lots of other differences, and so
it’s a lot of speculation. Frankly, I think the
international tests have been a bit misused by people
who have a particular point of view. They will provide
a comparison of two countries to support that point
of view when scientifically it can’t be supported
very well.
A2: [Peterson] There is only one
thing I would like to add and that is I agree with what
Rick said about a lot of these studies of the international
data not being convincing. The best one out there is
by an economist in Germany who concludes after looking
at these data that the two factors that do the most
to enhance performance on the international tests are,
one, whether or not you have an examination when you
graduate from high school, such as the A level or the
O level in the British case, where you have to do very
well on that test if you want to get into high quality
occupations or to go on to university, because that
gives incentives to students all through the adolescent
years to prepare for this examination. And this isn’t
a test that you prepare for. It’s very different
from our SAT, which you cannot prepare for in theory.
And this one is in theory, you must prepare for this
test if you’re going to pass it. And the other
thing is there is more choice in some places than others,
like I mentioned earlier. The Netherlands has choice
and that country has been really moving up in recent
years on these tests. And the Japanese have this huge
private sector. They have the official public schools,
and then they have this afterschool program, which is
basically private cram school (as they call it) and
the Japanese, of course, are off the charts in terms
of performance.
Q: Another question here on the popular
support for vouchers. This is a constitutional question.
The U.S. was founded on the principal of separation
of church and state. Would vouchers be a more acceptable
idea to the general public if the various proposals
maintained this separation? This is not so much about
what the courts say but the public’s affinity
to the idea of the absolute separation of church and
state.
A: [Peterson] Well, if the proposal
is that we shouldn’t have religious schools, I
think that the experience worldwide is that private
schools almost always are going to be formed by religious
communities. Religious communities are natural basis
for schooling. That’s how schooling came into
being. It was the missionaries who wanted to impart
knowledge of the faith to the next generation. That
formed schools in the first place. The secular schools
we have today are really modifications of religious
entities. And it’s extremely unlikely that you
could sustain a choice-based system that would have
a lot of variety in it of the kind that is envisioned
by the Friedmans without allowing the faith-based communities
to participate in that. Now, certainly you should have
secular options available as well, and the interesting
thing that is developing in Milwaukee is you’ve
got the faith-based schools developing through the voucher
program and the secular options developing through the
charters, and they’re proving to be extraordinarily
complementary. And the public schools have been responding.
Milwaukee, I think, is the only major city in the country
which now takes all of the dollars and gives them to
each school on a per pupil basis: every school in Milwaukee
now is funded on the basis of how many students it has.
So even the public schools are now being forced to be
more choice-minded. Also, they forced the teachers union
to accept a change in their contract so that experience
is no longer the only factor that determines whether
or not you’re going to get hired at a school.
So the choice-based system in Milwaukee is forcing all
kinds of changes in the public sector as well. The church–state
issue is going to be controversial in the United States
context. Worldwide there is no other country that has
this separation of church and state in education. The
English don’t, the Germans don’t, the French
don’t, the Dutch don’t, the Danish don’t,
the Swedes don’t, the Australians don’t,
people in New Zealand don’t. They all fund religious
schools. The government does. In the United State we
have a different tradition. But the voucher program,
by funding the individual rather than the school directly,
does avoid, the Zelman case says, this constitutional
question.
A2: [Hanushek] Can I just add
one quick comment. Part of the political battles are
not lessened by that. If we see what’s going on
in the debates over charter schools, the traditional
forces of the public schools have been spending an enormous
amount of political energy to limit and cripple the
possibility of any competition through charter schools,
which are all regular public schools and have no religious
background. So the argument about religious schools
in part is use any argument that you can to avoid competition,
but when there’s nonreligious competition, you
fight that too.
A3: [Peterson] It’s absolutely
true that those families who applied for the lottery
were families who were very concerned about their children’s
education. The test scores of the children themselves
are very low at baseline. They’re at the 20th
percentile level on average. So these are very low performing
students that we are talking about. They all are from
low-income families but they’re families that
are concerned. Most of the families are single-parent
families, 75 percent of them are. So this is not the
best and the brightest; this is a very challenged population
that applied for these vouchers in the first place.
Now, when we make the comparisons, we make comparisons
between those who applied and won the lottery and those
who applied and lost the lottery. So the comparisons
are among equals in concern about their children as
in all other respects. Now, you can say, “Okay,
so vouchers only work for those families who want something
for their children.”
Q: A lot of the discussion has been
focused on vouchers at the secondary level. What about
vouchers at the higher education level? This doesn’t
seem to be as actively discussed. Any comments on that?
A: [Hanushek] Well, we have them.
For the most part we have Pell Grants, which are federal
grants to low-income students that they can take to
public or private schools. In fact, one of the arguments
that’s traditionally made is that the higher education
system in the U.S. in fact confirms the arguments that
were started in Capitalism and Freedom because at the
higher education level we have a lot more choice across
schools; we have a lot of vouchers. In fact, in the
world, U.S. higher education is rated at the top. Foreign
students flock into the U.S. to get U.S. higher education.
Very few foreign students come to the U.S. to get to
the K–12 education, other than thinking of that
as an entry ticket into the U.S. in general.
Q: This ties in nicely with another
question. So the U.S. does compare poorly with other
countries at the end of high school. What about after
the basic baccalaureate level, do U.S. students then
catch up?
A: [Hanushek] Well, they don’t
have good measures of what it means to catch up. It’s
clear that people going through good U.S. colleges do
well in the labor market and they’re succeeding,
and so we don’t have that information. What we
do know is that it appears that a large portion of our
higher education energy is devoted to making up for
where the K–12 students start. So there’s
a lot of remedial education that goes on in higher education
that is trying to just make up for the poor start. Now
that seems to be working pretty well, as best we can
tell. But you don’t have quite the same comparisons
that you can make at the end of higher education to
make it as objective.
Q: Is there any basis to the argument
that the diminished role of local property tax financing
of public schools contributes to their poorer performance?
A: [Peterson] Well, I think it’s
quite remarkable that the biggest reform in American
education today has been the reduction of local control
in education. We went from all these little school districts
out there, where most of their funding came from the
local community of the local tax base and we had small
schools. And we moved away from that, a situation where
the state used to fund about 20 percent of the cost
of education, to a situation where now about half of
all the cost of education is being paid for by the state,
and the Feds pick up 5 percent more or so. So the local
share has been just steadily declining. And then also,
with the emphasis on equity, it means that if you do
more to raise money locally, then you’ll get less
state aid, so it’s even less dependent on the
local than even these numbers suggest. And there is
the Tiebout model that I am sure many of you in the
audience know about. The idea is that there’s
choice among schools by choosing where you live. The
argument then is that we don’t need vouchers because
we already have public school choice, and you exercise
this choice by moving from one district to another.
It may have been that there was some of that in the
past. There’s a lot less of it today. Carolyn
Huxby says that in metropolitan areas where you have
more of this you get more efficient public services.
And where you have less of it you have bigger classes
and lower student performance. So there is some evidence
to suggest that the more we’re moving the finance
to the state and the federal government, the more we’re
putting controls on at the state level, the less dependent
we are on local community control of the schools, the
more we are moving away from a market like the situation
in the public sector to the kind of socialist pattern
that Milton talked about in his opening comments this
morning.
A2: [Hanushek] I would just reinforce
that quickly. One of the largest changes in school policy
in the last 30 years has been the intrusion of courts
into school policy, and its come largely from questions
of school finance and how to finance different school
districts from the state. It has led, as Paul mentioned,
to an increase in the state proportion of funding. But
more than that, with the state funding has gone state
control. The ultimate experience in this along these
lines I think comes in California where I am now a resident,
where it is essentially a state-run system with no variation
across the districts and it’s been a disaster.
That shows up in terms of national test scores and so
forth. Also, an experience that people in Texas know
well is that there’s a lot of conflict that has
been engendered with the courts trying to make school
policy.
Q: What evidence or what data do we
have on the efficiency of various incentive structures
or schemes for teachers that can be tied to student
achievement? Is it simply a matter of paying the teachers
more or has there been much work done on designing the
appropriate compensation packages?
A: [Hanushek] Well we know very
little about this because there has been a strong effort
to make sure that no incentives are introduced into
the schools. Now a lot of school systems have tried
what they call merit pay but what that means is two
or three hundred dollars extra per year per teacher.
Usually a teacher will actually, not just do better,
but take on extra responsibilities, and in fact this
hasn’t had much effect. So it’s used as
evidence that no incentive scheme could ever work in
schools. I think we’re going to start seeing a
lot more incentive schemes introduced in the schools
and a lot of experiments with them. It’s a simple
fact that in 80 percent of our labor market people make
judgments about the quality of workers and of allowing
pay and rewards according to the quality of their workers.
It’s only basically the public sector, largely
in schools, that we eliminate any possibility of judgments
about the quality of workers. I think that this is going
to break down because the arguments against it just
seem so incongruous to the population.
Q: Licensure procedures—how
do they differ across the United States, and between
the United States and other countries around the world?
A: [Hanushek] Well, let me start
with across the U.S. There are variations in licensure
procedures around the U.S. but as I mentioned in my
remarks, probably the most persistent reform in the
U.S. is to make it tougher to become a teacher. To increase
the number of courses that teachers have to take, to
put different testing into the procedures and so forth.
In fact, there’s a strong movement in many states
to require teachers to have a master’s degree
before they are certified. Some states already do that—New York state, for example, already does that. There’s
no evidence, let me say that slowly, there is no evidence,
that master’s degrees improve people’s performance
in the classroom. And yet we’re requiring it.
So what does it do? It makes it more costly to become
a teacher, it cuts down on the number of people who
would like to be teachers, it increases the price of
somebody teaching for a little bit of time, and then
going on into something else because that’s not
possible. I personally have the view that we need to
follow chapter nine of Capitalism and Freedom and move
back from all of our requirements now, with a judgment
about who does well in the classroom as being the requirement
for who’s in the classroom and not who jumped
enough hoops in their training. Now internationally,
there are a large number of countries that have different
licensure restrictions and requirements to get in that
have not, to my knowledge, been receding but in fact
have stayed constant. But again this comes down to a
question of how do you best make international comparisons,
and I’m not a very big fan of just comparing France
vs. the U.S.
A2: [Peterson] I think that the
states are more similar than they are different in
their licensure requirements and they are all definitely
moving in the direction of saying that you have to take
a certain number of courses in the area of education
in order to be able to teach. The big vested interest
here are these schools of education, colleges of education,
for whom this creates a captive clientele. By restricting
access to the labor market unless you go through these
hoops, you reduce the supply of labor, but it also is
a big deterrent for talented young people who might
want to go into teaching, even if only for a short period
of time, but do not want to take courses that are perceived
to be of little value. A lot of charter schools now
are able to avoid some of these licensure requirements,
and you do see a tendency of charter schools, as well
as private schools, to hire teachers that are more subject-matter
oriented and less formally trained, and also teachers
who have gone to more selective colleges that are more
concerned about the quality of their student body. One
of the things we have seen is a decline in the apparent
quality of people who say they are going into the teaching
profession. When you take the SAT test you can say what
profession you’re planning on going into, and
those who indicate they’re planning on going into
teaching, the average test score for that group has
been declining. That’s probably due to the fact
that job opportunities for women have greatly increased—there are many alternative jobs out there for women
today that didn’t exist 20, 30, 40 years ago.
So the talented women, the talented group, is looking
to other ways of doing what they want to do with their
lives. The response of public policy has been to increase
licensure rather than to really address the underlying
questions of how can you make this a rewarding profession.
It’s not a rewarding profession now because it’s
so lockstep in its design. You progress slowly up a
ladder, dictated solely by experience, and merit is
not given any kind of recognition. And so talented people
go elsewhere, and today it’s more so than ever
because of the changing job opportunities for women.
Q: Is there any relationship between
school size and student performance just looking at
public schools alone?
A: [Peterson] I’m not as
knowledgeable on this literature as my colleague is,
and he says that the weight of the evidence is that
the smaller school is better. That’s not such
a well established proposition that you can say the
literature is in full agreement on it, and maybe Rick
doesn’t agree. The analysis that my colleague
has done has shown that the wage return from another
year of schooling in a small school is much greater
than in a large school, and he just completed that study
but it’s yet to be finalized, so it’s still
not definitive.
A2: [Hanushek] I think the evidence
is a little confusing. There’s not really strong
evidence one way or another on school size having that
distinct impact on student performance.
Q: What about the role of athletics
in promoting gigantism in public schools? Is this detrimental
to choice?
A: [Hanushek] This is very important
in Texas.
A2: [Peterson] Here’s my
basketball theory of public education. The basketball
theory goes this way. This came to me because I took
history from the basketball coach in the public school
in Montevideo, Minnesota. He wasn’t a bad coach;
our team made it to the state tournament. The students
who were on the basketball team, he must have given
them pretty good instruction. In history class, he never
attended class; he always went down to the smoking room
with the janitors and smoked down there. But it was
okay because right next to my desk was the condensed
version of Toynbee’s history of the world, whatever
that was called. And so I read Toynbee that term and
so maybe that was better. But I don’t think anybody
else learned anything in that classroom because everybody
was doing so much talking. But he also was the physical
education instructor and what would happen in Phy Ed
is, we would all go out there and stand around. First
of all, we’d spend 15 minutes getting ready for
Phy Ed and then we’d have to shower at the end,
and the 30 minutes we were out there, we all stood around
and one person had a basketball and the rest of us stood
around and watched him. And that, I think, is Phy Ed
in America. I don’t think this was special; I
think this is the way it is. Now, why is this? Well,
if the basketball team does well, the whole community
feels great and you can raise money for the school.
So there is a huge incentive for schools to have good
teams that have to be effective in a competitive environment.
That leads to resources coming back into the school.
So, it’s only natural to concentrate your resources,
or your energies, on producing outcomes that will benefit
the system. The Phy Ed program, you know, who cares
about it. Nobody cares about it, so why do it? But isn’t
that just the way it is in general, that if you have
a few students who you can get into the ivy leagues,
you can brag about that to the local news media and
you can say we’ve got a great school. But then
how about all the rest of the kids—they just get
lost. Now this was, I think, Rick’s really important
point, Insofar as we are now saying every child is to
be tested and all of those scores are to be released
to the public and every parent is going to know how
their child is doing, then maybe schools will have incentives
to be concerned about all of their students and not
just the basketball stars or the academic stars in the
school.
A3: [Hanushek] Let me just say
a couple things on athletics. I spent some time recently
with Arkansas, which is trying to reform its accountability
and finance system, and then also talked a little with
the people in Texas. I would have thought that athletics
cut the other way, in the sense that the first act of
Gov. Mike Huckabee in Arkansas, who is really interested
in school reform, was to propose a school consolidation
bill. And he was almost run out to Texas because of
this because it would eliminate some of the athletic
teams if you consolidated schools. So I thought in general
it would cut the other way. The other point, though,
that I think is important is that parents in communities
have complicated interest in schools, and with more
choice we might have some schools that sort of emphasize
athletics and we would live with that to allow other
schools to emphasize completely more academic things
that other parents want. That’s one of the aspects
of choice. One of the aspects of choice of higher education
is not that every college and university in this country
is great. There’s no evidence of that, but there
is evidence that the people are getting a lot more of
what they’re individually demanding.
Q: Has there been a large increase
in the ratio of education administrators to teachers
over the past 40 years?
A: [Hanushek] Well, the proportion
of funds that go to teachers’ salaries, out of
total spending, has plummeted over the last 100 years.
Now, it’s a little bit hard to tell how many are
administrators and how many are doing other things but
it’s clear that salaries of classroom teachers
is a much smaller proportion of what we are spending
on education.
A2: [Peterson] The one thing that
we haven’t mentioned is that licensure also kicks
in at the level of the principal and higher level administrators.
We have all these doctoral programs out there and educational
administration programs, which are very large, very
substantial, very important as a source of income for
a lot of colleges. Why? Because you’ve got to
have these degrees in order to become a principal or
to become a higher level administrator. And this means
then that you can’t bring in to education very
easily people from other occupations who have management
skills that they’ve demonstrated in other areas
unless they’re willing to go through this long
arduous process, which usually means you have to be
a teacher first in order to become a principal and then
you’ve got to acquire all of this additional stuff.
So it could be even more serious of a problem at the
management level of the public school system—the
licensure problem may be even more serious there than
it is at the teacher level.
Q: Suppose the voucher program were
to be introduced. Where is the money going to come from.?
In an election year, no one wants to say raise taxes.
So where will the funds come from? Are you going to
cut homeland security or defense?
A: [Peterson] Basically, the idea
of a voucher program is that it doesn’t cost a
dime. In fact, you might even save money on it because
it’s really just changing the way you spend your
education dollar. You just say, instead of appropriating
the money and handing it around to the schools and kids
go to these schools, you just say all this money will
go to the family and on each child’s back will
be $8,000 or whatever sum of money it is. It’s
the same sum of money. It’s not any new expenditure.
Now, that’s the theory of it, right? Rose, I’m
sure that’s exactly the way you and Milton have
thought about it, but what does happen in practice is
that in order to get a voucher program under way, one
of the compromises that has to be reached is the public
schools have to be held harmless. So if you’re
going to have vouchers, the public schools have to get
all the money for the kids they’re not teaching.
Say 5,000 kids leave. Well, the public schools still
should keep all the money for those 5,000 kids even
though they’re not going to be teaching them.
That’s the way the argument goes in the state
legislative debates, and so unfortunately a lot of voucher
programs do cost more money. But the reason is totally
political. It has no economic reality to it.
Q: Why can’t we just demand
public schools provide a better performance and simply
fire the poor teachers and administrators as we would
in business and hire new ones?
A: [Hanushek] We’ve tried
to do that, in the sense that we’ve not quite
fired them but we’ve tried to restrict it to make
sure that they’re only good. That’s what
licensure is about, to make sure only good people do
it. Past that, when we get down to teachers, there is
a huge reluctance to ever remove a teacher. In many
states state law stands behind the teachers. My favorite
is, I think it’s about eight years ago now, there
was a front page New York Times article about a New
York City teacher who was incarcerated at that time
for having sold cocaine to his junior high students
but still retained his employment rights because he
had, in fact, followed all of the procedural avenues
that were available to him to protect his job and was
in jail but still had the right to go back to a school
district. So we’ve built up a system which is
so bound up with defending all current teachers and
all current administrators from any removal that nobody
ever removes more than one teacher in a lifetime. There
are some principals that work to remove principals.
But they never remove more than one in a lifetime just
because these rules are there, and that’s part
of providing choice. And that’s one of the arguments,
by the way, for competition. Those kinds of rules cannot
stand up to competition if there’s outside competition
which is offering a system that doesn’t protect
all of the bad teachers.
A2: [Peterson] You know I would
not want to say there’s a lot of bad teachers,
but I do think it’s extremely corrupting to have
even one bad teacher or two bad teachers in a school.
It’s like having one bad kid who is totally disrupting
a classroom and you can’t do anything about it
because you’ve got these rules that say you can’t
deal with these disruptive forces. So you have this
teacher who’s totally not doing their job. Everybody
in the school knows that, and so it’s demoralizing
for everybody else in the school. That’s why some
of the most effective principals in urban settings are
those who have the strength of character to address
that person who is really doing a bad job and making
sure that person leaves the school. Now, almost always,
all that happens is that person leaves that school and
goes to another one. It’s much easier to achieve
that than to get outright dismissal. So the really effective
urban principal works on removing those bad teachers,
and that’s how they instill morale among the remaining
teachers, because this principal was willing to put
herself on the line, to really commit herself to the
children’s education, because there’s nothing
harder to do than to remove an ineffective teacher.
Q: I think this will have to be our
last question. If we did have a fully funded voucher
system, would private schools have any difficulty maintaining
the high standards? If something is free, is it still
valued?
A: [Peterson] That’s a good
question. It really goes to the point as to whether
or not you should have the vouchers that can be topped
up by private contributions. IIn Milwaukee if you get
a voucher, you can’t be asked to pay additional
sums of money to your private school. So private schools
just have mandatory “voluntary” contributions.
Private schools really believe that families should
put some dollars down. No matter how poor the family
is, they should be putting some money down and so, yes,
I think there would have to be additional contributions.
I think private schools would be creative in thinking
of ways of addressing that.
A: [Hanushek] I would have answered
it slightly different and say that there are going to
be some bad voucher schools, you know, that aren’t
up to quality, just as there are a lot of bad public
schools. You’re going to get a distribution of
these quality schools just as you do in higher education.
But that’s not an argument against vouchers, the
fact that you have a distribution. I think you will
maintain a large number of very high quality schools
and you will push up the mean and the right tail of
the distribution across the board, but you’ll
still have a left tail.
Q: Milton, Rose, any questions or
comments?
A: [Milton Friedman] I think it’s
an excellent approach. One of the desirable things is
that parents should contribute out of their own pocket
to their child’s education. One of the bad rules
of Milwaukee is the rule that the voucher has to constitute
full payment to the schools.
Thank you, Rick and Paul, for a stimulating session.
Thank you.
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