Published: April 18, 2007

The Echo Chamber: Quality Counts 2007

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Each month, The Echo Chamber will examine comments and controversy surrounding hot-button issues in education research compiled by the Editorial Projects in Education Research Center. This month's edition brings together a variety of viewpoints on Education Week's own Quality Counts 2007.

The 2007 edition of the annual Quality Counts report marked a departure from previous years by expanding its focus beyond the K-12 education system. In addition to such traditional issues as test scores and state education policies, the 2007 report also examines factors that connect K-12 schooling to early childhood wellbeing, the postsecondary educational environment, and economic conditions in the states. To see how states fare in light of this expanded view of education's importance throughout a person's lifetime, the EPE Research Center created the Chance-for-Success Index. Calculated for each state, the Chance-for-Success Index provides a state-focused perspective on the importance of education throughout a person’s lifetime. The index is based on 13 indicators that highlight whether young children get off to a good start, succeed in elementary and secondary school, and hit key educational and income benchmarks as adults.

TalkBack

Reactions to the report, and the Chance-for-Success Index varied greatly, from state officials praising the cradle to career focus, to organizations lamenting a perceived focus on state demographics rather than state standards.

View the complete text of Quality Counts 2007, as well as online-only extras.


Jack O'Connell, California state superintendent of public instruction

"I commend Education Week for significantly expanding the focus and context of its annual Quality Counts report. This report recognizes that student success and the success of our society in the future rests not just the quality of our K-12 education system but with many partners working together to prepare students for the future, from preschool through college, in and out of the classroom."

-from "State Schools Chief Jack O'Connell Issues Statement Regarding New Education Reports Released Today." (January 3, 2007)


Terry Bergeson, Washington superintendent of public instruction

"I'm excited about the K-12 academic index and our ranking there. I'm also happy that they're looking at outcomes and at a preschool-to-20 system. In a sense, it's where we're trying to go in Washington. It shows an understanding of the importance of early learning and the 'preparation gap,' how important kids coming to school ready to learn is to the K-12 system, and how college success is linked to what we do in K-12. It's a recognition of the whole system, from a kid's viewpoint, and a much better way to measure. They're starting to look at direction and indicators that we should be watching to improve the outcomes for students at all points in their lives. It fits where Washington Learns is going.

-from "'Quality Counts' report released" (January 3, 2007)


Liam Julian, associate writer and editor, Thomas B. Fordham Foundation

"The Chance-for-Success Index is defeatist, flawed, and largely ridiculous. It tells us nothing about the states it purportedly evaluates (Florida and California are ranked below Alaska--are we really supposed to buy that?). And states aren't the right unit of measure for this demographic information anyway; are we supposed to believe that folks who live in inner-city Baltimore or Newark are likelier to succeed than those in the Nashville or Houston suburbs?"

"The Chance-for-Success Index is a mess. Evaluating states not by the education policies they implement or the student learning gains they achieve, but by coarse, demographic data only gives comfort to an education establishment desperate to blame "poverty" for its failings. It's the antithesis of standards-based reform. Let's hope the focus of Quality Counts 2007 is merely part of an off-year, not the start of a repudiation of today's most promising reform strategy."

-from "Quality Doubts" in the Education Gadfly (January 11, 2007

Read EPE Research Center Director Christopher B. Swanson's response to the Education Gadfly


Bob Wise, President, Alliance for Excellent Education

From Cradle to Career demonstrates that education is a continual process, not a series of segmented steps. It’s a marathon, not a sprint, and without a path paved by investment all along the way, students are at risk of falling behind and falling down. At the federal level, investment is made at the very beginning and the very end of a student’s educational journey. Diminished attention to those years in between – the middle and high school years – has resulted in diminishing returns, including a high dropout rate and poorly prepared high school graduates."

“All students, at every age and level, deserve a consistently delivered, high-quality education. This report helps to illustrate that investments are needed at each checkpoint in the pursuit of success. Only then can all our students reach their potential and succeed in life.”

-from Alliance for Excellent Education press release (January 3, 2007)


The Education Trust

"The perversions in the Quality Counts approach are clear. For example, Colorado, which gets points for having one of the highest rates of adult educational attainment, is average in terms of college-going and ranks 29th in the nation in terms of six-year graduation rates for first-time, full-time freshmen. Iowa, on the other hand, gets no credit for adult educational attainment, but is above average college-going and 3rd in the nation in terms of its six-year graduation rate."

"So kudos to Education Week for pressing readers of Quality Counts to look at education as a continuum, from pre-K through college. Kudos, too, for reminding readers that the work of schools takes place in a broader context of children’s lives."

"But the Chance-for-Success Index needs some work. Instead of signaling just how important the work of schools truly is and giving educators and education policymakers in each state feedback on what they’ve accomplished with the students they have, Education Week added to the sense that “demographics are destiny.” And that defeat for some students—and educators—is all but inevitable."

-from Education Trust press release "Demographics Aren’t Destiny: What Schools Do Matters" (March 16, 2007)

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