Education insanity

Published January 29, 2016

by Walter Williams, professor George Mason University, published in Burlington Times News, January 28, 2016.

Some credit Albert Einstein, others credit Benjamin Franklin, with the observation that “the definition of insanity is doing the same thing year after year and expecting different results.” Whomever we credit, he was absolutely right. A perfect example of that insanity is education in general and particularly black education.

Education Next has recently published a series commemorating the 50th anniversary of James S. Coleman’s groundbreaking 1965 report, “Equality of Educational Opportunity,” popularly referred to as the “Coleman Report.” In 1965, the average black 12th grader placed at the 13th percentile of the score distribution for whites in math and reading. That means 87 percent of white 12th graders scored higher than the average black 12th graders. Fifty years later there has been a slight narrowing of the math gap leaving the average black 12th-grade student at the 19th percentile of the white distribution; 81 percent of white 12th-grade students score higher. The black-white reading gap has narrowed such that the average black 12th-grader scores at the 22nd percentile of the white distribution, meaning 78 percent of white 12th-graders score higher.

Eric A. Hanushek is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University and research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. His Education Next contribution is “What Matters for Student Achievement: Updating Coleman on the Influence of Families and Schools.” Hanushek concludes, “After nearly a half century of supposed progress in race relations within the United States, the modest improvements in achievement gaps since 1965 can only be called a national embarrassment. Put differently, if we continue to close gaps at the same rate in the future, it will be roughly two and a half centuries before the black-white math gap closes and over one and a half centuries until the reading gap closes.” I would like to know what American, particularly a black American, can be pleased with that kind of progress and the future it holds for black people.

Many see smaller class sizes and more money as part of the general solution to our nation’s educational problems. It turns out that since 1955 the average number of students per teacher has fallen from 27 to 16. During the same period real per-pupil expenditures have increased more than fourfold. Today, expenditures per pupil in the United States exceed those of nearly every other country in the world. The Program for International Student Assessment, or PISA, ranks 15-year-old student academic performance in 34 OECD countries. In 2012, the U.S. students performed below average in mathematics and ranked 27th. In reading, U.S. students ranked 17th; and in science, they ranked 20th. Such a performance gap suggests that smaller class sizes and bigger budgets, in and of themselves, are not a cure to our nation’s educational malaise, particularly that of black students.

The most crucial input for a child’s education cannot be provided by schools, politicians and government. As such, continued calls for more school resources will produce disappointing results as they have in the past. There are certain minimum requirements that must be met for any child to do well in school. Someone must make the youngster do his homework, ensure that he gets eight to nine hours of sleep, feed him breakfast and make sure that he behaves in school and respects the teachers. If these minimum requirements are not met, and by the way they can be met even if a family is poor, all else is for naught.

What the education establishment can do is to prevent youngsters who are alien and hostile to the educational process from making education impossible for those who are equipped to learn. That is accomplished by removing students who pose disciplinary problems, but the Barack Obama administration is even restricting a school’s power to do that. You might ask, “Williams, what are we going to do with those expelled students?” I do not know, but I do know one thing: Black people cannot afford to allow them to sabotage the education chances of everyone else.

Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To find out more about him, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

http://www.thetimesnews.com/opinion/20160128/column-education-insanity

 

January 29, 2016 at 10:42 am
Michael Harper says:

Dr. Williams,

I think that you are 100% correct in your assessment of the situation, and the significant step that must be taken to improve education for African-American students (the removal of students who detract from the education of others), is a much needed one. Sadly - and speaking as a teacher - I do not think for one, single moment that this society would try to save the many by ejecting the few. I cannot envision any scenario where a district would remove troublesome students from the classroom so as to improve the classroom climate and provide opportunities for success.

The only way this would occur is if school district put forth the money to create effective alternative schools with programs that stand a reasonable chance of helping these troubled students to becoming productive members of society. However, even if a school board was committed to such a practice, they would need the facilities, budget and committed, capable instructors to make the plan a viable solution. To simply remove students who diminish the chances of success for others - no matter how beneficial that might be - would only be opening the door to massive litigation and no district will expose themselves to that.

Your answer is the correct one, but without an alternative program for these students that is well funded and staffed, it will never happen.

January 29, 2016 at 2:46 pm
Bennie Lee says:

Professor Williams-Forgive me for not having read your entire message, but

the opening few paragraphs lead me to this comment.

I am an engineer and have a degree in math. A few years ago my company was

bought out and my wife being a long time high school teacher and my having worked as a help with some after school activities, it look like such a rewarding profession. So things being what they were I took what NC called a lateral entry and started teaching eight grade math.

What a shock to my system. If we, in my day, could get away with what todays

kids get away with, we would have tore down the school building.

And That is the answer to your observation of learning. The public schools have absolutely NO way of making the students sit in a seat and do the assigned work. White or Black. And, you don't want to hear this, but blacks can and do

get away with more misconduct than whites. You can stand up and say no all you want to, but I have been there, I know. Have you, I dare say not.

Bennie Lee

By the way, three years is all I could take. I had another profession to go back to. Others do not have that option.