105 Peavey Rd, Suite 116, Chaska, MN 55318
952-361-4931
www.edwatch.org -
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February 9, 2007
A Minnesota House
Committee heard five different full-day
kindergarten bills this week (HF 2, HF 78, HF 140, HF 597, HF
637).
Are legislators looking at what improves education,
or are they pursuing another agenda?
All-Day Kindergarten Failing as Education Reform
All-day kindergarten fails to improve Stanford 9
reading, math, language arts scores
[Published at
EducationNews.org.]
PHOENIXA report published today by the
Goldwater
Institute examines
Stanford 9 test scores and finds Arizona kindergarten programs initially
improve learning but have no measurable impact on reading, math, or
language arts test scores by fifth grade.
The study, Putting Arizona Education Reform to the Test: School Choice
and Early Education Expansion, by Matthew Ladner, Ph.D., vice-president
for research at the Goldwater Institute, is the first of its kind to
empirically test the relationship between Arizona kindergarten programs
and later school achievement.
Governor Napolitano has made expanded kindergarten a key piece of her
education reform strategy, saying:
The data is simply overwhelming that the combination of quality childcare
and full-day kindergarten will reap rewards many times the financial
investment we make now. Our childrenwill have higher academic
achievement if we start them off on a stronger footing.
Darcy Olsen, president of the Goldwater Institute, says, "This
report demonstrates that all-day kindergarten is not an education reform
strategy that policymakers can hang their hats on. All-day k delivers
short-term benefits at best."
The study analyzes test score data from schools throughout Arizona that
offered all-day kindergarten or preschool programs during the 1999-2000
school year. In those schools, reading and math test scores for third
graders are higher than those without all-day or pre-k. By the fifth
grade, however, there is no difference in test scores between schools
with and without these programs.
Dr. Ladner controls for the percentage of students in English Language
Learner programs, students eligible for free and reduced lunch, student
ethnicity, teacher experience levels, among other variables. The
Goldwater Institute also examined the impact of all-day kindergarten on
AIMS passing rates and found passing rates did not improve.
The study also measured the impact of competition from charter and
private schools on public school test scores. Building on a 2001 study by
Harvard University economist Dr. Caroline Hoxby, which found schools in
Maricopa County facing competition for students from charter schools had
faster student achievement gains, Dr. Ladner applied a similar
methodology to schools in Pima County.
Stanford 9 test scores show that during the 2001-2004 school years,
students at Pima County public schools facing competition moved up in
their Stanford 9 rankings faster than schools not facing competition.
Schools facing competition made gains twice as large on the Stanford 9
math test than those not facing competition. In Stanford 9 reading
scores, competition group schools gained an average of four national
percentile points, while the non-competition group averaged less than
one.
"This report is not an indictment of kindergarten as an institution.
It just makes clear that if policymakers are looking for an education
reform strategy that has been proven to work, the search is over. Early
education programs like all-day kindergarten and preschool do not deliver
long-term academic improvement. Competition for students, however,
increases achievement in the short-term through higher test scores and in
the long-term through greater year-over-year achievement gains,"
explains Dr. Ladner.
105 Peavey Rd, Suite 116, Chaska, MN 55318
952-361-4931
www.edwatch.org -
edwatch@lakes.com
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