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Shanker Blog: A Research-Based Case For Florida’s Education Reforms

Advocates of the so-called “Florida Formula,” a package of market-based reforms enacted throughout the 1990s and 2000s, some of which are now spreading rapidly in other states, traveled to Michigan this week to make their case to the state’s lawmakers, with particular emphasis on Florida’s school grading system. In addition to arguments about accessibility and parental involvement, their empirical (i.e., test-based) evidence consisted largely of the standard, invalid claims that cross-sectional NAEP increases prove the reforms’ effectiveness, along with a bonus appearance of the argument that since Florida starting grading schools, the grades have improved, even though this is largely (and demonstrably) a result of changes in the formula.

As mentioned in a previous post, I continue to be perplexed at advocates’ insistence on using this “evidence,” even though there is a decent amount of actual rigorous policy research available, much of it positive.

So, I thought it would be fun, though slightly strange, for me to try on my market-based reformer cap, and see what it would look like if this kind of testimony about the Florida reforms was actually research-based (at least the test-based evidence). Here’s a very rough outline of what I came up with:

  • One of the big conundrums in social policy is that lawmakers and the public demand evidence that policies work before supporting them, but also that you have to try policies before you know whether they work. Florida was an earlier adopter of some of the education reforms spreading across the nation today. As a result, they have been around long enough to be subject to some strong policy evaluation, which might inform the rest of the nation, including your state.
  • The evidence thus far, though tentative, is encouraging. Specifically:
  1. There is some indication (also here, here and here) that the A-F grading system, as part of a larger accountability system, led to modest but statistically discernible improvements in the performance of the small number of schools receiving the lowest grades. These improvements do not appear to be entirely the result of undesirable “gaming” behaviors, such as teaching to the test;  (but, as is often the case in test-based accountability, such behaviors may have played some role). This is consistent with evidence outside of Florida, and at the national level;
  2. Florida’s charter schools, like those in most other states, have not been shown superior to comparable regular public schools. Their estimated test-based impacts vary widely by school (also see here and here), though one study suggests that charter high schools had a positive impact on graduation rates, and there is some research suggesting that the state’s tuition tax credit (“neovoucher”) program led to small but noticeable improvements in nearby public schools’ performance. This too squares with evidence elsewhere;
  3. It is still very early, the first pieces of evidence about the impact of Florida’s policy of retaining third graders who do not score sufficiently high on reading tests suggest that the policy may also be having a positive impact;
  • Of course, policymakers considering these interventions for their own states should bear in mind that the estimated impacts of these policies, may very well be different when tried outside of Florida.
  • In addition, the estimated effects tend to be quite modest. There are no silver bullets. Implementation is difficult, requires investment of financial and human resources, and real improvement is slow and sustained.
  • That said, on the whole, the policies for which evidence is available have shown promise. We believe that these reforms, done correctly, can also work in other states.

Reading this outline over, I must confess that I’m skeptical it would be received enthusiastically. No doubt state and local leaders live under a constant barrage of policy advocates offering them miracle results for minimal costs, and some of them might not be particularly impressed by what amounts to an pseudo-academic literature review followed by a promise of slow, rather modest benefits.

I do, however, believe that this is the kind of honest presentation they should be hearing, and that advocates on all “sides” of the education policy debate, if they’re fortunate enough to be asked to play this role, should be providing.

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Matthew Di Carlo

Matthew Di Carlo is a senior research fellow at the non-profit Albert Shanker Institute in Washington, D.C. His current research focuses mostly on education polic...