Month: February 2015

The company behind “All Those Tests”

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In an extensive article in Politico, Stephanie Simon explores the vast influence of Pearson-a private sector corporation based in London- on the American education system.

For the full article click here.

There has been a great debate in our country over the past 20 years on the role of standardized testing in this country. It is perhaps the most divisive issue in education policy today. Many critique high-stakes standardized for wrenching control of the classroom from local campuses and teachers. Others claim that a standardized test is important to ensure quality instruction on all campuses. The truth probably lies somewhere between these two arguments. However, one thing is sure: the policy decisions are being made by a decreasing number of stakeholders. Chief among these are the executives of Pearson, who strategically aligned themselves to have vast influence on assessment and instruction, in addition to teacher training and accountability.

“The genius of Pearson is the interconnection among their markets…That gives Pearson its power.”

According to Simon:

“To prepare their students for Pearson exams, districts can buy Pearson textbooks, Pearson workbooks and Pearson test prep, such as a suite of software that includes 60,000 sample exam questions. They can connect kids to Pearson’s online tutoring service or hire Pearson consultants to coach their teachers. Pearson also sells software to evaluate teachers and recommend Pearson professional development classes to those who rate poorly — perhaps because their students aren’t faring well on Pearson tests.

‘The genius of Pearson is the interconnection among their markets,’ said (Michael) Apple, the education policy professor(at the University of Wisconsin-Madison). ‘That gives Pearson its power.’”

A great deal of Pearson’s power is the size of the company. Founded in 1844 as a construction firm, Pearson has grown to an international conglomerate with interests in education, news media, publishing, and entertainment. They own such well-known brands as Penguin Random House publishing, Madame Tussauds wax museum, and the quiz-show “Family Feud.” The company’s bread and butter comes from American schools, though. Pearson’s international profits for education alone exceeded $1 billion. 55% of that came from its North American education division. While much of that money goes into research and development, Pearson maintains a massive lobbying effort, both in Washington and in local state houses. Some estimates show that Pearson’s non-profit division spent $1 million in Texas alone lobbying law makers.

The size of the company combined with its lobbying interests have afforded it the power to earn No-Bid contracts, both at the district and state levels. The brands represented by Pearson (and many of its subsidiaries) have become so ubiquitous with assessment and instruction that many lawmakers do not give a second thought to using them as their sole-source provider. Many critique this monopoly as the reason standardized testing has been largely inefficient and ineffective. However this trend seems to be changing.

Again, Simon says:

“[A] big blow came this fall in the Lone Star State when Education Commissioner Michael Williams declined to renew Pearson’s $90 million-a-year contract to run the Texas standardized testing program.

The state auditor had ripped into the contract in a 2013 report that concluded it was far too vague to allow for effective oversight by the Texas Education Agency. The contract had so few details about the costs of each element that when the legislature eliminated 10 of the 15 tests required for high school graduation, state officials had to rely on Pearson to tell them how much they’d save.

Texas launched a competitive bidding process for new exams and is now reviewing the proposals.”

This will have a major impact on the future of assessment in our state. If other companies are allowed the opportunity to provide services to local ISDs and state assessments, the market will drive improvement. Perhaps Pearson will continue to be the best. But some competition is just what Texas needs to keep this massive company honest, and make sure they are doing what’s best for our students, and not what’s best for their bottom line.

For too long, “these tests” have borne the brunt of the criticism. This critique ignores the bigger picture and the value of testing in the school system. Assessment is a valuable tool for ensuring student success across geographic and socio-economic strata. It is also important as a formative tool for knowing what goals to set for classroom learning. However, when one company monopolizes control over an industry, innovation suffers.

Local campuses and districts need to be able to find resources that will work for their teachers and students. Much of those resources can be developed by the teachers and administrators themselves. And when districts need to outsource some of the work, there needs to be room for small upstarts to develop useful and innovative content. Of course, all of this needs money. The answer lies in where state legislatures allocate funds. As Texas moves forward into a new budgetary biennium, Texans need to encourage our lawmakers to move funding away from a major foreign corporate interest, and toward the wellbeing of Texas schools, Texas Teachers, and Texas children.

What the President’s Budget Says about American Education

Barack Obama

The Presidential Budget for 2015 says a great deal about President Obama’s priorities for the future of our country. As a part of a broader theme on Middle Class Economics, he devoted a significant portion of the budget to Education reform. For the full text on the President’s requests for education funding, click HERE.

Here are the bullet points:

  • $750 Million for Preschool Development Grants and a $1.5 Billion increase for Head Start Funding-both initiatives would dramatically increase funding to provide quality education to all American children as young as 3 years old.
  • $1.1 Billion increase to Title 1 Funding for low-income schools that use the money for evidence-based improvements to student outcomes.
  • $11.7 Billion for Special Education Services
  • $773 Million to provide services for English Language Learners
  • $8 Billion in funds to help recruit, train, and retain high-quality teachers.
  • $556 Million in School Improvement Grants and $125 Million in funding to develop New School Models that enact evidence-based reforms and reimagine American High Schools.
  • $375 Million in Charter School Funding
  • $300 Million in funding for research on innovation and effective practices in education.
  • And, of course, free Community College for all Americans.

This whopping sum of money might seem astronomical, but is actually a relatively small portion of the federal budget. Of course, very little of this funding will ever see the light of day. But that was never the point, was it?

I was re-watching an old episode of The West Wing the other night in which Alan Alda, who plays a Republican candidate for president, is speaking to a democratic White House staffer. He talks about the fact that the framers of the Constitution never intended for members of the United States government to trust one another. This is why they invented the system of checks and balances. The branches of government are designed to keep us from getting along and agreeing on everything. He argues that this piece of history has been the bedrock of our Nation’s strength, and I tend to agree.

If I had my way, every dime of this funding would get minted tomorrow. Of course, if I had my way, the federal government would go broke. Even if the wealthiest Americans and our Corporate partners footed their fair share of the bill (which they should), there will never be enough money to help everyone Democrats want to help. And even if there was, a Republican congress would never let us spend it all. And that’s OK. We need to have a push and pull on government spending. It’s good that no single person gets to say where we spend our money, and what our national priorities are. A legislative body that marches lockstep with one another will likely fall, like lemmings, off a cliff. The process allows room for productive debate. This Budget puts education at the forefront of that debate.

President Obama has spent much of his presidency fighting for broader access to opportunity. How that is enacted is anybody’s guess, but I think it’s a noble pursuit nonetheless. His 2015 Budget isn’t a line-item report, but rather a list of priorities to put America to work for Americans. What I see when I read his funding requests for education is a prescient point.

In the State of the Union, President Obama pointed out that, for the first time in a century (at least), a generation of Americans will not receive more education than their parents. Coupled with consistent rhetoric from employers that the incoming workforce lacks the skills and ethic they need to be productive in 21st century jobs, we see a crucial priority for our country. The way we educate our Nation’s youth isn’t working, We need to do more.

Schools will likely not see much of the money President Obama requested for education. American’s will likely not receive a free and compulsory education that extends far beyond their 18th birthday anytime soon. But we can look at ways to change the system. We can find opportunities to innovate instruction, broaden access, and deepen knowledge right now. This is how we will show state and national legislators that schools are worth the investment. Clearly, Americans are primed for a conversation on getting schools to work again. As educators, our first priority should be to get to work on schools that actually do work. The money will follow!