Friday, January 22, 2010

Hoxby: Too early to draw sweeping conclusions on charters

In the wake of KET's recent discussion of charter schools the communication lines aroud here have perked up.

Some have asked me to look into Sheldon Berman's statements, and I will - next chance I get. It is too soon to draw conclusions about charters. That includes calling charter schools a failed reform. That is nonsense. Just like sclling charter schools a civil right is nonsense.

One KSN&C reader wanted to know why I remain unconvinced by Carolyn Hoxby's research which suggests that New York's charter school students outperform their public school peers. The reader asked why I don't love her method of comparing charter school students with nearby public school students.

Well, in part, it's because I'm not sure they are peers. The other part is an admitted suspicion of psuedoscientific work from some institutions that collect (buy) like-minded researchers and then set out to create data in support of their predetermined worldview.

I have no idea how to guard against this - except to remain suspicious, think critically, and to wait for scholarly confirmation through peer review before jumping to any conclusions.

Speaking of which, there's this from "Advantage None: Re-Examining Hoxby’s Finding of Charter School Benefits" by Lawrence Mishel and Joydeep Roy on Hoxby's 2004 study:

Hoxby's analysis, however, suffers from the fact that her method of comparing charter schools to their neighboring regular public schools (and to those neighboring public schools with a similar racial composition) inadequately controls for student backgrounds. In her sample of matched schools there are often significant differences in the demographic and socioeconomic characteristics of the students. For instance, comparing the charter schools in Hoxby's sample to the matched neighboring public schools with a similar racial composition shows that the charter schools have a disproportionately higher black population (34% vs. 28%) and higher white population (43% vs. 36%), while the share of Hispanics is lower (18% vs. 30%). Her sample of charter schools also has disproportionately fewer low-income students than does the matched "racially similar" sample of neighboring public schools (49% vs. 60%). The same picture emerges in terms of the demographics of charter schools in central cities: charter schools serve a disproportionately lower share of minorities and low-income students compared to their matched regular public schools. Thus,
without further controls, Hoxby's method of comparing "racially matched" schools does not appear to be effective in controlling for student characteristics.

Hoxby's result of a positive charter effect on math proficiency disappears when racial composition is controlled for directly. Further, when both racial composition and low-income status are controlled for, the positive effect of attending a charter school disappears for both math and reading (it becomes very small and not statistically significantly different than zero). Thus, Hoxby's conclusion that "although it is too early to draw sweeping conclusions, the initial indications are that the average student attending a charter school has higher achievement than he or she otherwise would" (Hoxby 2004a) does not hold up against direct controls for student background.


Plain and simple - the jury is still out on the performance of charter school students relative to public school students.

Now for those who want me to quit doubting Hoxby and start lovin' her findings, particularly in the wake of CREDO's recent softening, my answer is - I can't. At least not yet. Let's have some pros give her data the twice over before we start promising the public something we cannot deliver.

In the meantime, surely skeptics and hopeful romantics alike can agree with Hoxby when she says it's "too early to draw sweeping conclusions."

6 comments:

SPWeston said...

Here's what puzzles me. Show me a principal who is passionate about a school vision--curriculum, instruction, and culture. Show me teacher who apply because they want that vision and get hired because the principal believes they can implement it well. Then show me parents who found the vision interesting enough to apply to send their kids. If you've got those three things, shouldn't your school be substantially, dramatically more effective than other schools serving students from similar homes?

It's like the Wildcats running up a 20 point lead in the first quarter and yet end up in triple overtime.

How charter advantages be so narrow they allow this much debate?

Richard Innes said...

Richard,

You are very confused about Hoxby’s latest study. It does not use the format that Mishel and Roy criticized half a decade ago (BTW, Your link to Mishel and Roy is broken. Here is the current one: http://www.epi.org/publications/entry/bp158/).

Hoxby’s latest, 2009 study in New York City (http://www.nber.org/~schools/charterschoolseval/how_NYC_charter_schools_affect_achievement_sept2009.pdf) takes advantage of the random lotteries used in New York City to fill charter schools. Hoxby compared the lottery winners’ performance to the performance of those students who didn’t win the lottery – a random sample study approach. It does not compare charters to nearby public schools.

So, Hoxby’s latest results, which are random-sample in nature, are compelling as well as being remarkably favorable to charter schools. But, forget Mishel and Roy’s old critique. It is totally inapplicable here.

By the way, Hoxby isn’t the only one using this lottery/random sample study method.

A 2009 study from The Boston Foundation and the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (http://www.tbf.org/uploadedFiles/tbforg/Utility_Navigation/Multimedia_Library/Reports/InformingTheDebate_Final.pdf Accessed 19Jan10) also took advantage of the availability of data from random selection lotteries for Boston’s charter schools to do a similar analysis.

The Boston study specifically says of the charter lottery approach, “This lottery-based approach is a very strong research design.”

The study does point out that not all charters in Boston could be included as some lacked necessary lottery data, but the point is that the basic methodology is considered very sound by many knowledgeable people, not just Hoxby.

The Boston study found what Hoxby found in New York City. This second, lottery-focused study shows remarkable performance in Boston’s charter schools.

So, recent studies show charters are stepping away from the public school competition.

When you talk about promises not delivered, I can’t help think about the past 20 years of KERA. We heard many promises that were not kept. Today, we still see only about one in three, sometimes just one in four, of our kids testing proficient in NAEP. Performance events, a great hope in the early days of KERA went the same way as the math portfolios and assessment-based writing portfolios. Ungraded primary is just a mirage today. And, we have seen the complete demise of not one, but two, statewide assessment programs.

Are all charters perfect? Certainly not! But, the charter school community is learning. What is happening in Boston and New York shows that.

Richard Innes said...

I hope Susan will repost her comment. It has so many gramatical problems, especially in the last sentence, that I can't tell what she is trying to say.

Anonymous said...

...and to wait for scholarly confirmation through peer review before jumping to any conclusions.

Yea...let's wait for confirmation from some scholar sitting in his/her UK office who couldn't give you directions to the nearest public school without referring you to their research assistant. I think you're right to be cautions and ask questions, but be careful those scholars providing you answers aren't attending global warming conferences with their colleagues ;-)

Anonymous said...

I like the last comment.

I'm a UK grad, and I'm getting a degree from the University now, but it is always too FUNNY when the Curriculum and Instruction people get involved.
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Richard Day said...

... and be equally sure that they are not coming from an ideological institution that predetermines its outcomes.

Let's see... I rely on my graduate assistant for many things; but as a UK grad who now works in EKU's department of Curriculum and Instruction I don't need directions to find a school. Maybe it's the 31 years I spent there. I'll work on the levity.

Susan: It seems to me that there are numerous examples of successful schools out there - public, private, parochial, charter, magnet.... and the most successful have those things in common - plus a lot of hard work over long hours. I don't know why that dedication can't be the case in every school except, owing to human nature I suppose, it's not.

If the way to create success through innovation is by waiving state regulations, then I say let's get the KBE busy waiving some regs. I, for one, would have loved to recoup the time and energy that went into implementing the primary program and put that effort into teacher effectiveness training.

Sometimes we have to get the system out of the way of the improvements.

But I know it's not that simple. There is no magic in simply waiving regs. The magic is in the dedication of well-supported, high quality teachers working with parents who are on the team.