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Superintendent Benson, NEA President Chase Blast Fordham Report

A recent Fordham Foundation report that is critical of public school standards throughout the country was labeled "faulty," and "shoddy" in a strongly worded statement released by State Superintendent John Benson. Meanwhile, NEA President Bob Chase also blasted the report, saying it is "is completely out of line with more objective analyses." Both statements follow.

Read the Fordham Foundation report

Latest Fordham report "shoddy"
By John T. Benson

In the last decade, few people in America have hurt our children more than Chester E. Finn Jr. As president of the conservative Fordham Foundation, he has redefined mean-spiritedness in his ongoing assault on public schools.

Finn's most recent fiction - "The State of State Standards 2000" - pretends to grade the states on educational standards and accountability. In truth, the report is yet another effort to turn public schools - this country's most successful institution - over to profiteers.

His faulty conclusion that public education is failing has become the Holy Grail for critics who want to spend public tax dollars on religious and other private schools with an academic record of success little different than their public counterparts. In his ideal world, education is for-profit classrooms and cut-throat competition for the best students and the wealthiest parents; disadvantaged students be damned!

If distortions, half-truths, and shoddy research weren't so dangerous, it would be laughable. Yet, Mr. Finn ought to be feared by those with the best interests of children in their hearts and souls because, unfortunately, he has the ears of conservative talk-show hosts, social engineers, and political powerbrokers.

Enough is enough.

Finn's real motives are described best by his own so-called research. The five states that make the report's "Honor Roll" in terms of standards are among the lowest scoring states on the only accountability measures available: the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) and the Third International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS).

For example, only four nations (Colombia, Iran, Kuwait, and South Africa) scored lower than "Honor Roll" member Alabama in math, and only six nations (the same four plus Cyprus and Belgium) scored lower in science.

On the other hand, many of the states Finn blasts for "irresponsible standards and weak accountability" scored extremely high on both NAEP and TIMSS, including Connecticut, Vermont, North Dakota, and our neighbors Minnesota, Iowa, and Michigan. Very few countries can touch these "irresponsible" states in terms of academic achievement.

According to Finn, Wisconsin is among "42 states (that) still hold mediocre or inferior expectations for their students"; we're not irresponsible, he says, just "going through the motions." Yet, in all comparisons of national and international achievement, the countries with students whose performance equals or exceeds that of students in the Badger State can be counted on one hand.

What's up, Chester? Shouldn't "mediocre standards and weak accountability" result in low student performance?

Maybe he's playing politics, or maybe Finn is just so far removed from reality and wrapped up in his own altered ego that simple logic escapes him.

Most of all, I detest Finn's constant attacks because of what they do to our schools, to our educators, and especially to our children. No matter what public school educators do, it's never right and it's never enough.

America is arguably the only remaining global power, an accomplishment that I choose to believe relates directly to our ability and willingness to educate each and every child.

Here in Wisconsin, we know what our kids can do. We know the excellence of our teaching force, and we know that our public high school graduates are responsible, in part, for a strong economy, an improving environment, and a standard of living second to none.

In my estimation, Mr. Finn is a conservative ideologue, a demagogue, and a political hack.

There is no doubt that our schools face many challenges. The challenge, however, is to make the best better, not to destroy a public education system that has helped to make America great.

Chase says Fordham report 'defies common sense'
By NEA President Bob Chase

Once again, Chester Finn has set forth a report, based on a tortured set of criteria, that is designed to paint a picture of public school failure -- despite a decade of progress in student achievement.

The Fordham Foundation's analysis of state education standards and accountability measures is completely out of line with more objective analyses, such as that published by Education Week in January 1999 which awarded 28 states with a grade of A or B.

It defies common sense for Fordham to call 21 states "irresponsible" when many of them are at the top of every analysis of student performance.

Any criteria that judges as failures Connecticut, Iowa, Minnesota, New Jersey, and North Dakota -- states that by every other measure have outstanding student achievement -- is clearly counting something other than the quality of education provided students in the public schools.

Objective analyses and thoughtful recommendations are helpful. The Fordham report is a far cry from either. It criticizes states for not having high standards and accountability -- and proposes as the solution "market-based" measures that undermine the role of states and localities in setting standards or monitoring progress.

We will continue to advocate for changes and improvements to assure public schools better meet the needs of all students. But we will take our cues from parents and work to see the changes they want -- smaller classes, high expectations for students, greater cooperation with parents, and access to the books, materials, and educational technology students need to be successful.

Posted January 9, 2000

 

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