May 24

We’re just a day away from the release of a new report, “Needles in a Haystack,” due out tomorrow from the Thomas B. Fordham Institute. The report will highlight the achievements of eight schools in Ohio that work with high-needs students’ and are achieving great results.

Not long after reading about the inspiring “Needles in a Haystack” project, I came across Charles Murray’s article, “Why Charter Schools Fail the Test”, published in the New York Times on May 4.

I agreed with one of Murray’s underlying messages: school choice should not be reserved for affluent parents, but should be available to all families in order to ensure each child receives the education he or she deserves. However, I found one statement in the article unsettling:

“Cognitive ability, personality and motivation come mostly from home. What happens in the classroom can have some effect, but smart and motivated children will tend to learn to read and do math even with poor instruction, while not-so-smart or unmotivated children will often have trouble with those subjects despite excellent instruction.”

The very idea Murray proposes – that economically-disadvantaged children will have trouble despite excellent instruction – quickly becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy that can itself contribute to underachievement.  Murray’s view has been discredited by schools all over the country – schools like the ones featured in “Needles in a Haystack.”  Across Ohio, schools in high-needs areas are proving that the same children who were labeled “not-so-smart or unmotivated” in the past can earn test scores that match or surpass the state’s highest performers.

The “Needles in a Haystack” report is just a glimpse of the academic success that can be achieved in high-needs areas when the correct steps are taken.  These schools are proof that no matter their background students can and will succeed when given the chance, regardless of what expectations Charles Murray has for them. 

These 2009 statistics, taken from Fordham’s “Needles in a Haystack” videos, speak for themselves:

Cleveland:

Citizens’ Academy (80% economically-disadvantaged students)

      Cleveland School District Students who passed the state reading test = 49%

      Citizens’ Academy students who passed the state reading test = 91%

Cincinnati:

College Hill Fundamental Academy (78% economically-disadvantaged students)

      Cincinnati district students who passed the state math test = 53%

      College Hill students who passed the state math test = 76%

Canton:

McGregor Elementary (90% economically disadvantaged students)

     Canton school district students who passed the state reading test = 59%  

     McGregor students who passed the state reading test = 76%

Columbus:

Valleyview Elementary (86% economically disadvantaged students)

     Columbus district students who passed the state math test = 58%

     Valleyview students who passed the state math test = 72%

Be on the lookout for the Fordham study, available here tomorrow. We’re grateful for these schools that continue to prove the experts wrong.

- Marisa Simon

Aug 21

On Wednesday, the Thomas B. Fordham Institute hosted a simulcast panel discussion on the future of charter schools and vouchers. The panel featured national experts including Ohio’s own Dr. Susan Zelman, namesake of the famous Zelman v Simmons-Harris US Supreme Court case based on the Cleveland Scholarship.

 

Much of the discussion landed on questions of accountability for schools outside the local public school district. Those same questions have routinely been raised in Ohio.

 

Accountability can take lots of forms, but the greatest attention is given to academic accountability (testing). Charter schools take all the same state tests as district schools and face closure if they don’t show student achievement. And private schools are both accountable to paying customers (parents who are free to leave the school if they feel it fails to educate their child) and required to administer state tests to students who receive vouchers.

 

Still, the question has been raised: When a school accepts state vouchers, how much information should the public have about student achievement?

 

At School Choice Ohio, we believe the student achievement of a student using a voucher matters and these students’ test scores should be among the information made public.

 

That’s why we supported landmark legislation in the latest budget that requires the Ohio Department of Education to report test scores of the students who use the EdChoice Scholarship and the Cleveland Scholarship and Tutoring Program.

 

These recent changes to Ohio law will put our state on the forefront of voucher accountability nationwide. Parents will have more information about how their children are doing and the public will have information about the investment they’re making in scholarship programs with tax dollars.

 

- Sarah Pechan