EDUCATION NOTEBOOK:
By Lindsey Burke
With Congress considering a $700 billion rescue package for our
financial market, taxpayers are rightfully asking questions about
how these funds will be spent. But all too often we forget to apply
the same scrutiny to the nearly $600 billion we spend in state and
federal dollars each year on K-12 education.
Any fair accounting should conclude that we're getting sub-par
returns on this investment.
While many of the nation's best and brightest go off to pursue
fulfilling educational experiences at colleges and universities
across the country, significant numbers of students leave high
school with gaping holes in some fundamental academic concepts.
National test scores reveal that many students are failing to
master basic skills. On the National Assessment of Educational
Progress, 33 percent of fourth-graders score below basic on
reading, as do 26 percent of eighth-graders. According to the
Department of Education, fourth-graders not performing at a basic
level are unable to make general conclusions about what they read.
At the eighth-grade level, this means students are unable to make
simple inferences or interpret ideas. For both grade levels, these
are crucial skills to master to ensure future academic success.
In addition, a poor grasp of basic content knowledge means
children are exiting high school unprepared for college or the
workforce, if they even graduate at all.
National graduation rates have stagnated around 73 percent, with
numbers significantly lower for minority students. In 2006, only 61
percent of Hispanic students and 59 percent of black students
graduated. An independent analysis found that, in some of our
nation's biggest cities, fewer than half of all students finish
high school. In the Baltimore City and Cleveland Municipal City
school districts, only about one-third of all students graduate.
Indianapolis has a graduation rate of only 30 percent, and a mere
24.9 percent of Detroit students complete high school.
These shockingly low graduation rates should incite a national
outrage. And while some politicians will surely call for investing
more tax dollars for public school as the solution, a lack of
funding is not the source of the problem.
Detroit, for example, spends more than $13,000 per year on each
student. In addition, the city school districts of New York,
Philadelphia, Dallas, Denver, and Atlanta all spend well over
$10,000 per pupil yet have graduation rates below 50 percent.
Historically, decades of increased funding for public education
have not led to better outcomes. A new Heritage Foundation report, Does Spending More on Education
Improve Academic Achievement? found that education spending is
at an all-time high, and student performance has flat lined.
The report details a 23 percent real increase in per-pupil
spending in the past decade and a real increase of 49 percent over
the past 20 years. With these figures in mind, it is hard to make
the argument that a lack of funding is the problem. Per-pupil
spending has more than doubled since 1970, yet academic achievement
has remained flat.
So if more money isn't the answer, what will lead to academic
improvement?
While policymakers need to continue implementing education
reforms to improve the efficiency and productivity of our schools,
a big part of the solution will come from the home. In a new
Heritage Foundation
report Academic Success Begins at Home: How Children Can
Succeed in School, Christine Kim reviews the social science
literature and finds a strong link between family structure and
parental involvement with student outcomes.
According to the study, evidence suggests a correlation between
family structure and high school dropout rates. This fact naturally
influences future educational outcomes and opportunities for our
nation's children. Family structure, or a lack thereof, appears to
affect college admission and completion rates.
Parental expectations have a greater influence on children than
peer influences. Kim notes, "Parental expectations of achievement,
particularly adolescents' perceptions of such expectations, appear
to strengthen their actual motivation and ability in school."
Kim explains that reform efforts emphasizing involvement and
greater parental choice in education will be the best steps in
enhancing student academic achievement.
"Instead of favoring proven ineffective education policies,
policymakers seeking effective education reform should consider
policies that strengthen family structure in America and bolster
parental involvement and choice in education."
Regardless of the quality of school that a parent must send
their child back to this fall, one thing is certain: Their
involvement in that child's education-meeting with teachers,
helping with homework, classroom involvement-will prove to have a
positive, significant effect on educational attainment and
aspiration. In an era of demoralizing national data on academics,
it is encouraging to know that the ultimate underpinning of a
child's success still resides with the family.
The newfound attention aimed at federal spending thanks to the
financial market rescue should focus attention on government
spending overall, especially in the case of education, where
exorbitant spending has proven ineffectual in combating current
tribulations. Basic laws of subsidiarity tell us to leave the
money-and the choice-in the hands of parents.
To learn more about these and other education issues facing our
nation, please see A Parent's Guide to Education Reform, a new
resource from The Heritage Foundation.
Lindsey Burke is
a Research Assistant in Domestic Policy Studies at The Heritage
Foundation.