Donate now

Privacy Policy

Protection of privacy is our first concern, and SQE does not sell or trade information provided by its subscribers or supporters. Your information is used to process donations and newsletter subscriptions, and to contact you about upcoming publications and events.

feed iconSubscribe to our Blog

Please note Downloads require you to have the Adobe Reader installed, you can get it here for free Adobe.com

 

 
 
Society for Quality Education

Charter Schools: The Best Way to Help Students from Low-Income Families

July 22, 2010 by at 09:47 AM

A new study from the respected Brookings Institution looks at a trial program underway in Harlem to overcome the effects of poverty and low education. The Harlem’s Children Zone (HCZ) is a comprehensive approach that includes “early childhood programs, with parenting classes; public charter schools; academic advisors and afterschool programs for children attending regular public schools; and a support system for former HCZ students who have enrolled in college. Health components include a fitness program; asthma management; and a nutrition program. Neighborhood services include organizing tenant associations; one-on-one counselling to families; foster care prevention programs; community centers; and an employment and technology center that teaches job-related skills to teens and adults.“ The program costs hundreds of millions every year and there are plans to expand it.

Because by no means all of the students attending the HCZ charter schools were eligible for the complete package of social and community support, the Brookings Institution was able to compare the academic outcomes of HCZ students and non-HCZ students in the HCZ charter schools, finding that students from outside the Zone garnered exactly the same benefits from the charter schools as did the students from inside the Zone. In other words, they found no evidence that the HCZ program was affecting student achievement absent the charter school component.

Quoting from the study (pp. 8-9): “There is no compelling evidence that investments in parenting classes, health services, nutritional programs, and community improvement in general have appreciable effects on student achievement in schools in the U.S. Indeed there is considerable evidence in addition to the results from the present study that questions the return on such investments for academic achievement. For example, the Moving to Opportunity study, a large scale randomized trial that compared the school outcomes for students from poor families who did or did not receive a voucher to move to a better neighborhood, found no impact of better neighborhoods on student academic achievement. The Nurse-Family Partnership, a highly regarded program in which experienced nurses visit low-income expectant mothers during their first pregnancy and the first two years of their children’s lives to teach parenting and life skills, does not have an impact on children’s reading and mathematics test scores. Head Start, the federal early childhood program, differs from other preschool programs in its inclusion of health, nutrition, and family supports. Children from families enrolled in Head Start do no better academically in early elementary school than similar children whose parents enroll them in preschool programs that do not include these broader services. Even Start, a federal program that combines early childhood education with educational services for parents on the theory that better educated parents produce better educated kids, generates no measurable impact on the acadmic achievement of children…..

“In contrast to disappointing results for Broader, Bolder initiatives, there is a large and growing body of evidence that schools themselves can have significant impacts on student achievement. The most powerful educational effects over which we have any societal control occur within the walls of schools. They are the effects produced by good teachers, effective curriculum, and the changes in leadership, management, culture, and time to learn that are incorporated into schools that beat the odds, including successful charter schools.“

Comments

The above has been said many times.  One can only hope that the waste of tax dollars on programmes which have little or no value will be scrapped, and charter schools and or the voucher system will become bigger and bigger.  Sooner or later it will come to Ontario.

Posted by Bev on 07/22 at 10:29 AM

I would not say that supports such as parenting classes, early childhood programs are a waste of money. I believe it leads to healthier outcomes for families, and wiser decisions when it comes to their children. It is hard to measure the outcomes of such programs of HCZ, when it does impact the local community, where school is just one facet of the community. The HCZ may have a greater impact on living conditions, where the landlords are pressed to clean up their buildings, and which asthma is just one of the many health conditions that are impacting children who lived in shoddy surroundings. As a result, by educating the parents, the parents are able to advocate for change on their own, rather than the government stepping in.

The study reconfirms what I have always thought, that there is no compelling evidence that investments in community supports, will impact student achievement.

At the end of the article, “There is considerable evidence that schools can have dramatic effects on the academic skills of disadvantaged children without their providing broader social services. Improving neighborhoods and communities is a desirable goal in its own right, but let’s not confuse it with education reform.“ 

Bears repeating, ‘Let’s not confuse it with education reform.“

Posted by Nancy on 07/22 at 11:11 AM

you’re right, Nancy.  I was thinking strickly of academic achievement; not other benefits, so the money for other programmes re: health etc. isn’t wasted.

Posted by Bev on 07/22 at 11:18 AM
Page 1 of 1 pages

Leave A Comment

Name:

Email (required but not displayed):

Emotions

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Submit the word you see below: