Wednesday, August 21, 2013

THREE POLLS SHOW MIXED REPORT CARD FOR EDUCATION REFORMS: Surveys suggest Americans know little about Common Core standards rolling out this fall + 3 Polls

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A classroom is shown. | Reuters

By STEPHANIE SIMON  - Reuters, from Politico |  http://politi.co/1dtbq64

8/21/13 12:03 AM EDT  ::  Americans have a decidedly mixed view of the education reforms now sweeping the nation, supporting moves to open up public schools to more competition — and yet wary of ceding too much control to market forces.

That’s the message that emerges from a trio of new polls on public education. Taken together, the polls out this week capture a deep ambivalence:

— Parents want a degree of choice in education; they continue to back charter schools. But they’re increasingly skeptical of voucher programs that use public funds to help families pay private and parochial school tuition.

— Parents are fine with high-stakes testing; in large numbers, they agree that kids should be held back a year or denied a high school diploma if they can’t pass state exams. Yet they’re less certain about tying teachers’ salaries and performance evaluations to student test scores.

— Americans want more funding for local schools, but they aren’t willing to blame tight budgets for all school woes; they identify a long list of problems, from poor discipline to overcrowding to low expectations for student achievement.

In short, the results give all sides in the education policy debate some points to crow about — and some to dismiss.

“Neither the defenders of the status quo nor those proposing major changes in education policy have achieved a public-opinion breakthrough in 2013,” said Paul Peterson, a Harvard professor and editor of the policy journal Education Next.

Education Next, which is published by the Hoover Institution, conducted one of the three recent polls. A second came from the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, with funding from the Joyce Foundation. The third, released Wednesday, is the PDK/Gallup Poll, which has been conducted annually for 45 years and is sponsored by Phi Delta Kappa International, a trade association for educators.

All three polls canvassed a nationally representative sample of more than 1,000 adults, though the AP-NORC poll only included parents of public school students. All have margins of error of 3 to 4 percentage points.

Among the important findings: Americans don’t know much about the Common Core academic standards, which are being rolled out in 45 states and Washington, D.C., this fall in an effort to transform reading and math instruction.

The PDK poll found that 62 percent of adults surveyed (including 55 percent of those with children in public schools) had never heard of Common Core. Among those who had some awareness, a third acknowledged they knew few details.

Supporters of the Common Core say the standards will train students in critical thinking and problem solving so they’ll be better equipped for college or careers. That message has the potential to resonate, the surveys showed, as many Americans are not confident that graduates of their public high schools are well-prepared to move on in life.

“We’ve got to do a much better job communicating the importance of Common Core,” said William Bushaw, executive director of PDK International.

The most striking differences between the polls were the findings on standardized testing.

The Education Next poll specifically asked whether state tests should carry high stakes. The answer was a resounding yes, with nearly 8 in 10 respondents supporting requirements that third graders pass a reading test before advancing to fourth grade and that high school students pass exit exams before earning a diploma.

The AP-NORC poll also found generally high support for standardized tests. About six in 10 parents said their kids took an appropriate number of exams and a similar number agreed that the tests should determine whether students are promoted.

The PDK poll took a different approach. Respondents were told that “over the last decade, there has been a significant increase in testing in the public schools to measure academic achievement.” They were then asked how that has affected school performance; just 22 percent said it helped, 36 percent said it hurt and 41 percent said it made no difference.

Each survey also asked a question that’s been a hot topic in state legislatures and the emphasis of several federal Education Department programs: whether student test scores should be used to evaluate teachers. Results varied, with support ranging from 41 percent of respondents in the PDK poll to 49 percent in the EdNext poll to 60 percent in the AP poll.

Amid all the rhetoric these days about failing schools and ineffective teachers, one more poll finding stands out as notable.

Asked how they would grade the school their oldest child attends, 71 percent of public school parents in the PDK poll said “A” or “B.” The AP-NORC survey got similar results, with 76 percent of respondents rating their child’s current education as good or excellent and 82 percent giving their child’s teachers high marks.

“Most of the time, parents have faith in teachers,” said Helen Gym, co-founder of the advocacy group Parents United for Public Education. “You would never know that from listening to the ed reform debate.”


The 2013 Education Next Survey

What Americans are thinking about Common Core and other education policies

By

Michael Henderson and Paul E. Peterson | http://bit.ly/19xGA9N

Although opposition to Common Core education standards is growing, an overwhelming majority of Americans remain supportive of these standards. A majority also back government funding of preschool education for disadvantaged children. At the same time, Americans are becoming increasingly resistant to demands for greater education spending and higher teacher pay. They give a higher evaluation to private schools than to public ones in their local community, but opposition to market-oriented school-reform proposals such as performance pay for teachers and school vouchers seems to be on the rise. Those are just a few of the findings from the seventh annual Education Next (EdNext) poll administered under the auspices of the Harvard Program on Education Policy and Governance (PEPG) to a representative sample of the U.S. adult population. Teachers, parents, African Americans, and Hispanic respondents were also surveyed in large enough numbers to provide reliable estimates of their opinions. Detailed results from 2013 and from previous years are available on the EdNext website.

Please note that in this survey we place the neutral option on an issue—neither support for nor opposition to the policy—as the last response option rather than placing it in the middle position. As a result, the number of respondents who took the neutral position dropped on almost every issue from what had been observed in prior years. (See the Methodology sidebar below for survey specifics.)

Major Findings

Other than the reduction in the percentage of respondents taking a neutral position, we find little change in public opinion on most of the education policy questions about which we inquired in this survey. Responses to all items are available in the accompanying table. Our discussion focuses on questions not posed in prior years and on items for which we observe significant changes in public opinion from prior years.

High support for Common Core, but growing opposition

Support for the Common Core remains very high despite recent political controversy. Nearly two-thirds of Americans favor adopting these standards in their state, roughly the same share as last year (Fig. 1). Adoption of the Common Core is in fact one of the most popular reform proposals about which we inquired. Yet opposition to Common Core may be strengthening, as the policy has come under increasing criticism from groups at both ends of the political spectrum. Although the share of the public who express opposition remains small at just 13 percent, that percentage has nearly doubled since one year ago. The growth in opposition coincides with a decline among those taking a neutral position, which may be due to changes in the survey design discussed above. It’s notable, however, that the shift was almost entirely toward the opposition.

Higher evaluations of local private schools

The public holds the schools in its local community in higher regard than it holds the nation’s schools. Nearly half say that local public schools deserve a grade of either “A” or “B,” but only about one-fifth say the same for the nation’s public schools. But if the public thinks better of local public schools than it does of those in the nation as a whole, it is definitely more satisfied with local private schools than with public ones. Nearly three-fourths of Americans give private schools an “A” or “B” (Fig. 2). Just 5 percent give private schools a “D” or an “F,” as compared to 16 percent giving one of those low grades to local public schools and 23 percent giving those grades to the nation’s schools.

Schools better at serving the more-talented than the less-talented students

Much of the discussion concerning American education policy focuses on the achievement gap between high- and low-performing students. Americans agree with many critics who say the public schools do a better job of educating more capable students than educationally disadvantaged ones. Close to three-fourths of the public say their local schools are doing well at attending to the needs of more-talented students, but that percentage plummets to just 45 percent when asked about the effectiveness of local schools at meeting the needs of the less-talented (Fig. 3).

Teachers see less disparity in the treatment of high- and low-performing students. While 77 percent think the highly talented are well served, 66 percent of the teachers say the needs of the less-talented are also well attended to.

Support for pre-kindergarten spending

President Obama has called for federal funding of preschool programs, and the issue has received strong support in Congress despite concerns about government debt and partisan gridlock. Widespread support for pre-kindergarten funding proposals may be inspired by the popularity of the idea among the public at large. When asked about support for a proposal “that would allow low- and moderate-income four-year-old children to be given the opportunity to attend a preschool program, with the government paying the tuition,” no less than 60 percent of the public responded favorably, with just 27 percent voicing opposition. Among teachers the response was even more enthusiastic: 73 percent in favor and just 22 percent in opposition.

Declining support for school spending and teacher pay

We inquired about local school expenditures in two different ways. We asked half of our sample whether they would like to see funding for schools in their district increase, decrease, or remain the same, while we told the other half the current per-pupil spending in their district before we asked that question.

Among respondents not told actual spending levels, only 53 percent support higher funding, down 10 percentage points from the 63 percent who were supportive a year ago. Information about current spending decreases support for higher levels of spending. Among those told how much local schools currently spend, support for spending increases was 43 percent, the same as a year previously.

We are uncertain as to why the decline in support occurs only among those who were not told about actual expenditure levels. We do know that the public is no better at estimating actual expenditure levels than previously. It estimates that expenditures average $6,680 per pupil, hardly more than 50 percent of the average actual expenditure level of $12,637 per pupil in the districts where respondents live.

A similar pattern holds for attitudes toward teacher pay. In 2013, 55 percent of respondents not informed of current pay levels favor increases in teacher pay, down from 64 percent taking that position a year ago. Meanwhile, only 37 percent of those informed of salary levels favor an increase, virtually the same as the 36 percent taking that position in 2012. Once again, we cannot attribute the change to better knowledge of actual salary levels, as average estimates of salary levels remain essentially unchanged at $36,428, about $20,000 below actual average salaries in the states where respondents live.

Merit-based teacher tenure

Those supporting such performance pay policies remains at 49 percent, virtually unchanged from the last time we asked this question in 2011. However, resistance to the use of student performance information to evaluate teachers seems to have intensified. Opposition to basing teacher salaries in part on student progress has grown from 27 percent to 39 percent over the past two years.

Similarly, 27 percent oppose basing decisions about teacher tenure on how well students progress on standardized tests, nearly double the 14 percent opposed to the idea one year ago. To be sure, this is less than half of the share of the public who support tying tenure to student performance, which remains at 58 percent. The growth in opposition comes at the expense of those taking the neutral position. But that drop in those who have no definite opinion does not change the level of support for merit-based teacher policy. The entire shift is toward greater opposition.

School vouchers

Growing resistance to reform extends to school voucher programs as well. Opposition to expanding school choice through a universal voucher initiative that “gives all students an opportunity to go to private schools with government funding” is higher in this year’s survey than a year ago. Whereas 29 percent of Americans expressed opposition to universal vouchers in the 2012 survey, 37 percent do so in this year’s survey. Those in favor of a universal voucher plan make up 44 percent, hardly different from 43 percent one year previously, a shift well within the margin of error. The fact that most of the shifts away from the neutral position on the merit pay, merit tenure, and universal vouchers questions result in greater opposition—while levels of support remain unchanged—suggests that something more is happening than mere changes in survey design. At the very least, opposition appears to be stronger than previously reported.

Those without a definite opinion with respect to charter schools dropped to 24 percent in 2013 from 41 percent in 2012. That is one of the largest shifts away from neutrality that has taken place as a result of placement of the neutral position as the last of five options. Both supporters and opponents show gains. Support for charters shifts upward from 43 percent to 51 percent, while the level of opposition increases from 16 percent to 26 percent. Since both supporters and opponents gain roughly equal percentages, we interpret this result as indicating no underlying change in the balance of public opinion.

Conclusions

On most issues, public opinion does not change much over time, and so it has been this past year. Even though the past 12 months have been marked by teacher strikes, debt crises at all levels of government, and intense partisan debate, public opinion remains quite stable.

For that reason, it is all the more interesting to observe that in some cases a shift in public opinion seems to be occurring. The public is becoming more resistant to rising school expenditures and to raising teacher salaries. But the public is also becoming increasingly skeptical of such reform proposals as performance pay and school vouchers. Neither the defenders of the status quo nor those proposing major changes in education policy have achieved a public-opinion breakthrough in 2013.

Methodology

The results presented here are based upon a nationally representative, stratified sample of 1,138 adults (age 18 years and older) and representative oversamples of the following subgroups: public school teachers, parents of school-age children, African Americans, and Hispanics. Respondents could elect to complete the survey in English or Spanish.  The nationally representative sample discussed here represents a subset of a larger sample used to analyze a broader experiment about how individuals respond to information about school quality. The sample consists of those who responded to the question as presented in the table accompanying this essay.

Survey weights were employed to account for non-response and the oversampling of specific groups. In general, survey responses based on larger numbers of observations are more precise, that is, less prone to sampling variance, than those made across groups with fewer numbers of observations. As a consequence, answers attributed to the national population are more precisely estimated than are those attributed to groups. The margin of error for responses given by the full sample in the EdNext-PEPG survey is roughly 3 percentage points for questions on which opinion is evenly split. The specific number of respondents varies from question to question due to survey non-response and to the fact that, in the cases of school spending, teacher salary, and voucher questions, we randomly divided the sample into multiple groups in order to examine the effect of variations in the way questions were posed. In these cases, the online tables present separately the results for the different experimental conditions.

Percentages reported in the figures and online tables do not always add precisely to 100 as a result of rounding to the nearest percentage point.

William G. Howell served as director of the 2013 Education Next-PEPG Survey of Public Opinion. The survey was conducted in June 2013 by the polling firm Knowledge Networks (KN), a GtK company. KN maintains a nationally representative panel of adults, obtained via list-assisted random digit–dialing sampling techniques, who agree to participate in a limited number of online surveys. Detailed information about the maintenance of the KN panel, the protocols used to administer surveys, and the comparability of online and telephone surveys is available online at www.knowledgenetworks.com/quality/.

The presentation of response options for our support/oppose questions differs from the format used in previous years. Previously, respondents selected from five options appearing in the following order: “Completely favor,” “Somewhat favor,” “Neither favor nor oppose,” “Somewhat oppose,” and “Completely oppose.” In this survey, respondents selected from the same set of response options, but the “Neither favor nor oppose” choice appears at the end of the list rather than in the middle. Placing this choice at the center of the response options may imply that it represents a moderate or balanced position, which respondents may select for reasons of social desirability rather than because of true neutrality. Placement at the end of the response set may suggest that this is a residual category to be chosen only if the respondent is uncertain or indifferent. Of the items discussed in the essay, responses to those concerning the Common Core, preschool, merit tenure, merit pay, vouchers, and charter schools were affected by the change in survey design. The exact wording of each question is displayed in the survey results.

Michael Henderson is assistant professor of political science at the University of Mississippi. Paul E. Peterson is the director of the Program on Education Policy and Governance at Harvard University and senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.

AP_NORC - Parents Attitudes on the Quality of Education in the US - 2013


2013_PDKGallup

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