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Issue 3, May/June 2002
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
A Dose of Market Discipline: The New Education
Initiatives
In the New Economy, growth increasingly
depends on the skills of the labor force. Given education's
role in the development of such skills—and the widely recognized
shortcomings of our educational system—upgrading America's
schools could boost economic growth. So it is not surprising
that the Bush administration has devoted a large part of its
domestic agenda to injecting a dose of market discipline into
the public school system.
On Jan. 8, President Bush signed into
law the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLBA). Together
with the expansion of education IRAs as part of last year's
tax cut, the NCLBA has the potential to significantly improve
both student performance and economic growth.
There is little doubt that the public
school system in the United States falls short of its potential.
Despite decades of increased spending on schools, students
continue to perform below expectations. Nearly 70 percent
of fourth graders have fallen so far behind in reading that
they may never catch up. On international tests of student
achievement, U.S. high schoolers are among the weakest in
the world. (See the box titled "International Comparisons
of Student Performance.") Thousands of public schools
have been identified as failing, and hundreds of thousands
of graduates must pursue remedial classes before they are
ready for college.
International
Comparisons of Student Performance
Since the 1960s, U.S. students
have participated in a variety of international
exams. The most recent such exam, the Third International
Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS), was administered
in 1995 (with a follow-up for eighth graders in
1999). As had been the case with all previous
international exams, U.S. performance at the high
school level was well below the international
norm. Only Cyprus and South Africa had math or
science scores significantly lower than the U.S.
average (see the lists below). Some try to dismiss
the poor U.S. showing by arguing that other countries
test only their best students. However, the TIMSS
was administered to would-be seniors, whether
in school or not. With the exception of Denmark
and Iceland, all the countries that scored better
than the United States also tested a greater percentage
of their 17 or 18 year olds than the United States
did. Furthermore, restricting the sample to only
the best students in each country (the top 25
percent of the eligible age group) does nothing
to improve our standing. All the countries that
score better than the United States in the full
sample also score better than the United States
in the restricted sample.
Significantly better than
the United States in both math and science
Netherlands
Sweden
Denmark
Switzerland
Iceland
Norway
Australia
New Zealand
Canada
Austria
Slovenia
Significantly better than
the United States in math but comparable in science
France
Germany
Hungary
Comparable to the United
States in math and science
Italy
Russian Federation
Lithuania
Czech Republic
Significantly weaker than
the United States in math and science
Cyprus
South Africa |
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The federal government
has limited responsibility for the public school system. Public
schools are, by design, a state and local affair. On average,
federal funding represents less than 7 percent of public spending
on primary and secondary schooling (Chart 1). The
federal share ranges from less than 4 percent in New Jersey,
New Hampshire and Connecticut to more than 14 percent in Mississippi
and the District of Columbia. Much of the federal aid is directed
at schools that serve economically disadvantaged populations
and therefore is concentrated in urban and poor rural areas.
Despite the federal government's limited
role, changes in its policy have the potential to greatly
alter the educational environment. To the extent that the
new reforms rely on market forces, they leverage a small financial
position into a significant force for change.
Lifting the Veil
The centerpiece of the education
initiative is a vast new accountability system. The NCLBA
requires all states to develop and administer student exams
in math, reading, science and any other subjects the state
deems appropriate. The exams should be challenging, rigorous
and aligned with the curriculum, so that teaching to the test
means teaching the material the state has identified as appropriate
for the grade level.
Math and reading exams will be administered
every year in every grade from third through eighth and at
least once at the high school level. Science exams will be
administered at the elementary, middle and high school levels.
Provided that the federal government foots the bill, states
will also be required to participate in the state version
of the National Assessment of Educational Progress, an evaluation
of fourth and eighth graders that is conducted every other
year.
Crucially, the states must not only
test, they must publish the results at the state, district
and school levels. These annual report cards must be concise
and presented in language that parents can understand. At
all levels, the report card must break out information on
the performance of low-income students, minority students,
special education students and students with limited English
proficiency.
Other provisions of the NCLBA also increase
the public's information about schools. At parents' request,
for example, districts must provide information on the educational
background and professional qualifications of each classroom
teacher. In particular, schools are required to provide "timely
notice that the parent's child has been assigned…a teacher
who is not highly qualified." In this context, a highly
qualified teacher is fully certified by the state, has at
least a bachelor's degree and has either passed a rigorous
test demonstrating knowledge in the relevant subjects or has
an academic major, graduate degree or advanced certification
in each subject taught.[1]
The NCLBA will generate a significant
increase in consumer information. A 1994 law requires states
to test and publish the results, but a student is tested only
once at each level—elementary, middle and high school. Furthermore,
as of April 2002, only 19 states were fully compliant with
the law, leaving most parents and voters ill-equipped to monitor
their schools (Chart 2). With the NCLBA, all states
must meet the 1994 requirements immediately (no more waivers
will be granted) and must meet the new, broader testing requirements
by the 2005–06 school year (2007–08 for science).

The simple act of publishing information
about student performance should have a positive impact on
school quality. Voters and parents will be better able to
monitor their schools and take corrective action. Schools
and teachers will be better able to identify their high-performing
peers and follow their lead. Research suggests that schools
are much more effective when it is easier to monitor their
behavior and that informing professionals about the best practices
of their peers encourages them to adopt those practices.
Unfortunately, it may be difficult to
identify high-performing schools and school districts from
the mandatory report cards. The NCLBA requires that states
and school districts publish information about the average
performance of various student groups. However, most researchers
believe that performance levels are flawed indicators of school
effectiveness. Instead, researchers favor an indicator of
the gain in student performance, preferably one that separates
the school's influence on learning from the influences of
parents and peers. The intuition behind this position is clear.
Some schools will post high average reading scores because
they have an advantaged student body, while other schools
will post high reading scores despite a disadvantaged student
body. Both have high-performing students, but only the latter
is a high-performing school.
The NCLBA's requirement that report
cards break out information on groups such as low-income students
is not sufficient to address this concern. Chart 3 plots the
average reading performance of low-income sixth graders in
Texas schools against a measure of the average gain in reading
performance for those same students. While the two measures
of performance are correlated, the relationship is not especially
close. Dozens of schools appear to be high performing on the
basis of average scores but fall to no better than average
once differences in student preparation and demographics are
taken into account.

Nothing in the NCLBA prevents states
and school districts from providing additional information
about performance gains. However, implementing a system of
value-added measurement requires tracking students from one
year to the next. For example, as students change schools,
there must be a mechanism for matching their fifth-grade scores
in one school with their sixth-grade scores else-where in
the state (or ideally, the nation). Some states, such as Texas,
already have the mechanism in place. To fully benefit from
the NCLBA's testing requirements, other states will need to
go beyond the law's minimum mandates.
Carrots and Sticks
In addition to empowering through
information, the accountability system enables the federal
government to introduce a variety of carrots and sticks. Schools
and states that show significant progress from one year to
the next can receive federal bonuses.
On the other hand, states must define
"adequate yearly progress" so that all students
are expected to improve and in 12 years all students meet
the state's standard for proficiency. Schools that do not
show adequate progress for two consecutive years will be flagged
as failing. States will get extra federal money to use to
turn them around, but at the same time school districts must
offer transfers and free transportation to students in failing
schools so they can attend better schools within the district.
If it is impossible to offer a place at a better school to
all students from a failing school, districts must give priority
to low-income students. If all schools in a district are failing,
the district must try to arrange places for its students in
other districts, but other districts are not obliged to accept
the students. The NCLBA makes no provision for private school
choice.
After a school has three consecutive
years of inadequate progress, the district risks losing federal
money. Districts that receive federal aid for low-income students
must make supplemental educational programs available to low-income
children at the failing schools. These supplemental programs
(such as after-school programs like those offered by Sylvan
Learning Centers) must be in addition to regular instruction
and must be provided by an organization with "a demonstrated
record of effectiveness." Churches, charities, for-profit
firms and successful school systems are all eligible providers
of supplemental educational programs, which will be financed
by redirecting the federal aid districts receive for low-income
children.
Failure that persists for more than
three years triggers mandatory reforms in addition to the
public school choice and supplemental education provisions.
These reforms range from curriculum changes to replacement
of local management with an outside private firm or a complete
state takeover of the school.
Ideally, the NCLBA's requirements for
public school choice would foster educational competition,
thereby inducing improvements in satisfactory schools as well
as unsatisfactory ones. But given that districts are only
required to transfer students among their own schools, the
competitive impact of the choice provisions is likely to be
muted. To the extent that schools within a district compete
with one another for enrollment and revenue, the choice provisions
will increase competition. In districts with limited school-level
autonomy, the choice provisions may offer little more than
an escape hatch for some of the children trapped in failing
schools.
Other Provisions
The NCLBA has a number of other
provisions in addition to the accountability system and its
ancillary incentives. It increases federal support for a variety
of programs, ranging from test development and reading initiatives
to teacher training and technology centers. Funding the NCLBA
will cost approximately $22 billion per year, nearly 18 percent
more than the prior program.[2]
In exchange for accountability, the
NCLBA also cuts some of the red tape that Washington had tied
to federal money. Although considerable complexity remains,
funding programs have been consolidated and streamlined. States
and school districts that meet performance objectives are
granted more flexibility than those that don't. For example,
the NCLBA permits states and districts in good standing to
transfer a portion of the funds they receive under certain
federal programs (such as the Teacher and Principal Training
and Recruiting Fund) into other programs (such as state and
local technology grants) in order to better serve their needs.
The increased flexibility should make it easier for schools
to respond to the new incentives. All the competition and
accountability in the world are meaningless if schools don't
have the authority to make changes.
Education IRAs
Another educational provision became
law as part of last year's tax relief act rather than the
NCLBA. Parents and other interested parties may make after-tax
contributions to Coverdell Education Savings Accounts, or
education IRAs. Starting with the 2002 tax year, the contributions
to each child's education IRA can total $2,000 per year (up
from $500 in 2001). The contributions and interest accumulate
over time and can be withdrawn tax-free for any legitimate
educational expense. Previous incarnations of the education
IRA excluded expenses for elementary and secondary education,
but those restrictions are now gone. Parents can use the accounts
to cover private school tuition or the cost of supplies and
curriculum materials for home schooling.
The greatest beneficiaries of education
IRAs are parents in the top income tax brackets. Not only
are they more likely to contribute the full amount each year,
but the tax savings on the accumulated interest are greater
for people in the 38.6 percent tax bracket than for people
in the 10 percent tax bracket. Low-income parents who pay
no income tax receive no direct benefit from education IRAs.
The public school system as a whole
can benefit from the expanded education IRAs if they foster
an increase in competition among schools. Almost across the
board, researchers have found that competing with other education
providers to attract or retain students makes public schools
better.[3] Public school students from areas where there are
many education providers score higher on standardized tests,
complete more years of schooling and earn higher wages after
they finish school. Meanwhile, per pupil expenditures by public
schools are substantially lower in states and communities
where there are more districts to choose from. In other words,
competition forces districts to get more bang for their buck.
Unfortunately, given the relatively
small magnitude of the individual tax breaks, education IRAs
are unlikely to change parental behavior much, especially
over the near term. With the exception of parents teetering
on the brink of sending their children to private schools,
the primary beneficiaries of the expanded IRAs are parents
who were going to send their kids to private school anyway.
If the policy doesn't at least threaten to change enrollment
patterns, it doesn't increase the competitive pressure.
The Tail That Wags the Dog
The Bush administration is relying
heavily on market forces to improve school quality. Its initiatives
provide consumers with substantially more information about
public schools and provide a small boost to competition among
schools. Such a strategy allows the federal government to
leverage its relatively small role in elementary and secondary
education into a more powerful force for change. In addition,
provisions offering flexibility in exchange for accountability
represent a subtle but important shift from a system that
tries to manage the educational process to one that emphasizes
results. Although they could be bolder, the new education
initiatives should improve America's schools.
—Lori L. Taylor
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| About the Author
Taylor is a senior economist
and policy advisor in the Research Department
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Notes
- To be deemed highly qualified, a teacher must
not have any certification requirements waived
on an emergency, temporary or provisional basis.
- The NCLBA amends the Elementary and Secondary
Education Act (ESEA). ESEA, which was enacted
in 1965, is the primary federal law affecting
K–12 education and the source of most
federal support for education.
- For further discussion, see Lori L. Taylor,
"The Evidence on Government Competition,"
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Economic
and Financial Review, Second Quarter 2000.
About Southwest
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