Student test scores rose faster under Florida鈥檚 high-stakes testing program than they did under the federal program that was partly modeled after it, a study concludes.
The study, which was presented by Harvard University researchers at a British economics conference last month, compares academic gains Florida elementary school students made in one year under the state鈥檚 A+ Accountability Plan with those that came a year later as requirements of the federal No Child Left Behind Act kicked in across the state.
Read the report, from the at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.
Although limited in scope, the study drew intense criticism last week from education researchers on this side of the Atlantic Ocean. They attacked the study as much for the way in which it was made public as for its findings. Academics complained that authors Paul E. Peterson and Martin R. West had acted 鈥渋rresponsibly鈥 by allowing their report to be passed along to reporters without getting it vetted first by independent scholars.
Critics are especially irked because the authors signed a full-page advertisement in TheNew York Times last summer that criticized the American Federation of Teachers, the nation鈥檚 second-largest teachers union, for using similar tactics with a study shedding a critical light on charter schools. (鈥淎FT Charter School Study Sparks Heated National Debate,鈥 Sept. 1, 2004.)
If outside scholars had examined this new study, some researchers said last week, they would have found it flawed, inconsequential, and a bit premature.
鈥淲hy rush in with a one-year result when we know so many one-year results are ephemeral?鈥 said Gerald A. Bracey, an Alexandria, Va.-based education researcher and an associate professor of education at George Mason University in Fairfax, Va.
Different Approaches
Though the study was not published in a scholarly journal, the Harvard researchers said, they did send it to four or five colleagues and responded to their critiques.
鈥淪o we felt pretty comfortable in releasing it,鈥 said Mr. West, a research associate with Harvard鈥檚 Program on Education Policy and Governance.
Mr. West and Mr. Peterson believe the bigger gains students experienced under Florida鈥檚 homegrown efforts may have been due to the plan鈥檚 more nuanced structure and the nature of the threats it presents to poorly performing schools. Under the Florida plan, students qualify for vouchers to attend private schools if the public schools they attend get F grades twice in any four-year period. (Schools also qualify for cash bonuses if grades improve.)
Students can also switch out of failing schools under the NCLB law, but only if they move to another public school in the district鈥攁n option that few choose.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not quite the same thing as a kid receiving a voucher,鈥 said Mr. Peterson, a government professor and the director of the Program on Education Policy and Governance.
Also, he noted, small percentages of Florida schools鈥8 percent and 2 percent, respectively鈥攓ualified for embarrassing D and F grades in 2002. In comparison, he said, 75 percent of the state鈥檚 schools were cited for failing to make adequate yearly progress in 2003 under the federal program, putting poor-performing schools in more company.
In schools that were newly assigned F鈥檚 in the summer of 2002, the researchers found, students鈥 test scores improved by 4 percent of a standard deviation more the following school year than did test scores in comparable D schools. Scores in newly named D schools, likewise, improved by 4 percent of a standard deviation more than those in C schools did. The gains, which all came on state tests, did not translate to nationally normed tests that students also took.
鈥楽imilar Beliefs鈥
The researchers found no similar gains for students in schools found lacking under the federal No Child Left Behind program.
Though the improvements under Florida鈥檚 program were modest, the researchers said, they could add up to substantial gains if they continue.
But many independent researchers argued last week that the findings were too small to be noteworthy.
One reviewer who disagreed with those critics, though, was Jay P. Greene, a Florida-based researcher for the Manhattan Institute, a conservative-leaning think tank based in New York City. He maintained that the Harvard study was important because it relied on data on individual students, rather than on schools, where changes in student mobility can skew findings.
鈥淏oth programs are based on conceptually similar beliefs,鈥 Mr. Greene added, 鈥測et this shows that the details of how it鈥檚 implemented matter.鈥