Hard Work for Good Schools: Facts Not Fads in Title I Reform
Despite billions of dollars spent on Title I programs, there has been
little serious research into why Title I money isn't producing larger
gains since the 1980s.
--Gary Orfield, The Civil Rights Project at Harvard University
Title I, the largest compensatory education program for impoverished
public schools in the U.S. for more than a third of a century, is up for
reauthorization this year by Congress. The program--which helped
narrow the racial gaps in educational achievement in the 1960s and 1970s--has
been strongly criticized since the Congressionally-mandated Prospects
study reported no academic gains for the national sample of Title I students
which it tracked. Critics of Title I point to these failures and call
for a radically different approach, while supporters argue that proper
implementation of the law could produce substantial gains
Hard Work for Good Schools: Facts Not Fads in Title I Reform, edited
by Gary Orfield and Elizabeth H. DeBray, is the most serious collection
of new research on Title I since its inception in 1965. Commissioned by
The Civil Rights Project at Harvard University, these studies challenge
many common assertions about Title I, and call into question some of the
basic assumptions underlying the education reform efforts of the last
two decades. They also contribute solid evidence about educational gains
and underscore the civil rights implications in this legislation. This
report argues that the major issues being debated between the administration
and Congress are extremely unlikely to produce real gains and that much
better results are possible with intelligent focus on the evidence of
what actually works and vigorous administration of the law.
Major findings conclude that:
- State accountability systems that fail to look at performance of
minority and low-income students do not produce the appropriate kind
of accountability.
- Decentralized teacher development of curriculum in poor schools may
actually produce losses in student achievement over the longer term;
these schools are overwhelmed and benefit much more from social service
supports.
- Class size reduction in the early grades is an intervention that is
positively associated with growth in poor students' test scores.
- Although socioeconomic status is still the foremost predictor of
student achievement, reformed instructional practices can produce significant
gains. Curriculum is central to improving the educational opportunities
of Title I students, but better assessment and sustained efforts of
retraining are also needed.
- Concentrated poverty in both schools and neighborhoods is a central
educational problem that lowers student achievement. The prevalence
of poverty in students' neighborhoods is as strong a factor in
student achievement as is the individual student's own socioeconomic
status.
- The role of the local school district in assisting schools with the
selection and implementation of schoolwide projects, whether locally
or externally developed models, appears to be a critical factor in implementation
success.
Hard Work for Good Schools: Facts Not Fads in Title I Reform
New research on Title I including the work of top scholars in the field:
James M. McPartland, Johns Hopkins University; David Grissmer and Susan
Bodilly of RAND; Gary Natriello, Teachers College; Robert E. Slavin, Johns
Hopkins University; and Gary Orfield, Harvard University.
About the Editors:
Gary Orfield is Professor of Education and Social Policy at Harvard
University, teaching at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and the
Kennedy School of Government. He is codirector of The Civil Rights Project
at Harvard University, a think-tank started in 1996 to tackle issues of
civil rights policy and enforcement. Elizabeth H. DeBray is a doctoral
candidate at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and a research assistant
with the Consortium for Policy Research in Education (CPRE).
For More Information
Contact Michal Kurlaender at 617-496-6367 or Christine Sanni at 617-496-5873