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Everything’s up the Spout in Kansas City (Spending more money on education doesn't work)
National Review ^ | 9/17/2009 | John Derbyshire

Posted on 09/18/2009 7:27:23 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

Okay, you’re probably thinking that when politicians and edbiz theorists talk about spending more money on education, they don’t have leafy suburbs and ivy-clad universities in mind. It’s those inner-city schools that are “failing our children.” That’s where we should be spending more money, right?

The optimists’ faith that spending oodles of money will solve any problem is quite touching. In the case of education, though, the spend-more-money theory has actually been tested to destruction in several places. The Thernstroms cover two of these tests in detail in No Excuses: Kansas City, Mo., and Cambridge, Mass.

Kansas City is the more interesting case. The Thernstroms give it a page and a half, leaving out some of the juicier details. There is a much fuller report on the Cato Institute website, written by education reporter Paul Ciotti.

In 1977, when the story begins, Kansas City’s schools were in simply terrible shape. The city, like most others of its size (pop. 460,000), had experienced white flight from the 1950s on, and the school district even more so, even whites resident in the city pulling their kids out of the public schools. By 1977 enrollment was 36,000, three quarters of them racial minorities (which at that point meant mostly African Americans). The voters had not approved a tax increase for the district since 1969. In 1977 litigation commenced, members of the school board, district parents, and some token children suing the state and some federal agencies on the grounds they had permitted racial segregation. Federal judge Russell Clark, a Jimmy Carter appointee, got the case.

After eight years of litigation, Clark gave the plaintiffs everything they wanted, and then some. He in fact ordered them to “dream” — to draw up a money-no-object plan for the Kansas City school system.

Dreaming is no problem for educationists. The plaintiffs — education activists and their lawyers — duly dreamt, with an initial price tag of $250 million for their dreams. This was twice the district’s normal annual budget.

It proved to be only a start, however. Over the next twelve years the district spent over 2 billion dollars, most of it from the state of Missouri, the balance from increased local property taxes. Fifteen new schools were built and 54 others renovated. New amenities included, Ciotti tells us:

an Olympic-sized swimming pool with an underwater viewing room; a robotics lab; professional quality recording, television, and animation studios; theaters; a planetarium; an arboretum, a zoo, and a 25-acre wildlife sanctuary; a two-floor library, art gallery, and film studio; a mock court with a judge’s chamber and jury deliberation room; and a model United Nations with simultaneous translation capability. [Students] could take courses in garment design, ceramics, and Suzuki violin. . . . In the performing arts school, students studied ballet, drama, and theater production. They absorbed their physics from Russian-born teachers, and elementary grade students learned French from native speakers recruited from Quebec, Belgium, and Cameroon. . . . There were weight rooms, racquetball courts, and a six-lane indoor running track better than those found in many colleges. The high school fencing team, coached by the former Soviet Olympic fencing coach, took field trips to Senegal and Mexico. . . . Younger children took midday naps listening to everything from chamber music to “Songs of the Humpback Whale.” For working parents the district provided all-day kindergarten for youngsters and before- and after-school programs for older students.

The whole project was a comprehensive failure. After twelve years, test scores in reading and math had declined, dropout rates had increased, and the system was as segregated as ever, in spite of heroic efforts to lure white students back into the system.

Kansas City did all the things that educators had always said needed to be done to increase student achievement — it reduced class size, decreased teacher workload, increased teacher pay, and dramatically expanded spending per pupil — but none of it worked.

The great C-130-loads of money being air-dropped on the system also brought about waste and corruption on a heroic scale. Theft was rampant. So was overmanning: The project became a huge jobs and patronage program, with the inevitable mismanagement and scandals.

I have just (late 2008) been on GreatSchools.net, looking up Kansas City’s Central High School. That’s the one with the Olympic-size swimming pool; the school was rebuilt from scratch at a cost of $32 million under Judge Clark’s supervision. Nine percent of students are testing “above proficient” in math, against a state average of 46 percent. For Communication Arts the corresponding numbers are 6 percent, 39 percent.

(The Cato report has a postscript on the Sausalito, Calif., elementary-school district, which serves not the prosperous white liberals of that Sausalito, but a mostly-minority public housing project close by. Same limitless expenditures, same results. Kansas City is by no means the only case.)

With some honorable exceptions like the Thernstroms, who, as I have said, give the Kansas City experiment a page and a half in their book, this dismal story has mainly been flushed down the memory hole by education theorists. They would rather not have it mentioned. A decade after the whole thing collapsed in grisly and obvious failure, politicians and edbiz bureaucrats are still routinely calling for more money to be spent on schools as a way to improve student achievement.

Barack Obama, for example. On the 2008 campaign trail, the day before the Martin Luther King birthday holiday, Obama told a swooning congregation at King’s old church that: “We must push our elected officials to supply the resources to fix our schools. . . . We can’t pass a law called No Child Left Behind and then leave the money behind.”

Money is the answer! More money! That’ll fix the schools! That’ll close those pesky gaps!

Education theorists are great forgetters, and were even before Judge Clark came along. The first of the big modern government-sponsored papers on school reform, James Coleman’s 1966 report titled “Equality of Educational Opportunity” (but almost always referred to as “the Coleman Report”), surveyed 645,000 students in over 3,000 schools nationwide. Coleman found almost no relationship between school quality — spending, newness of facilities, teacher credentials — and student achievement.

If you rank schools from worst to best by these measures of quality, then work your way up the ranking from low to high, logging student achievement as you go, once you get above a tiny proportion of really, really bad schools, nothing much changes. A truly excellent school with terrific facilities does somewhat better by its students than a mediocre school, but the difference is not great. What makes the difference is family background.

All this was discovered, at considerable effort and expense, in 1966. Apparently nobody told Judge Clark. Who knows? — perhaps some future government will commission some new study to find out how student achievement relates to school quality. Then, a decade later, perhaps some new federal judge will order some new spend-a-thon, beggaring the taxpayers of his state to no effect at all. Lather, rinse, repeat.

It is not quite true that there is nothing new under the sun, but there is nothing new in education theory, ever: just the same truths, revealed again and again, then pushed down the same memory hole by the same lying careerists, the same wishful-thinking fantasists, and the same parrot-brained politicians.

— John Derbyshire is an NRO columnist and author, most recently, of We Are Doomed: Reclaiming Conservative Pessimism.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: education; kansas; money

1 posted on 09/18/2009 7:27:23 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
I like capitalism. I like the free market. I like money.

But when it comes to government ... money is an absolute evil. In almost all ways, more money means more problems. The US federal budget should be dramatically, painfully reduced. Things would be much better.

As it is, adding more money simply allows failure to hobble on unchecked.

2 posted on 09/18/2009 7:34:35 AM PDT by ClearCase_guy (Play the Race Card -- lose the game.)
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To: ClearCase_guy

I believe that America’s educational system was much better and in fact on top of the world when we did not have a Federal Department of Education.

After this Department became part of Washington DC, education went nowhere but downhill from there.


3 posted on 09/18/2009 7:43:54 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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You can find failure in any endevor.


4 posted on 09/18/2009 7:48:49 AM PDT by webboy45
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To: SeekAndFind

bump


5 posted on 09/18/2009 7:49:18 AM PDT by VOA
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To: ClearCase_guy

You are right - we have to limit the money government gets at every level. How? By staking it to our cumulative adjusted gross incomes. So let’s say you add all of our incomes (after the only deduction allowed - charitable donations - have been deducted) and it comes to $100. We give the Feds $10; the State $6; the county $3; and the city $1. That is a total of 20% of our incomes. Voters could still vote to tax themselves, of course, but this tells government that they have to get by with less.

Any comments on the percentages? Less? More?

http://pushbackuntil.com


6 posted on 09/18/2009 8:04:58 AM PDT by DennisR (Look around - God gives countless, indisputable, and unambiguous clues that He does, indeed, exist.)
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To: SeekAndFind

What they didn’t do was take it out of the hands of the Kansas City School Board. A more politically and racially motivated group of boobs never drew breath.


7 posted on 09/18/2009 8:11:11 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: DennisR
I won't get into numbers (though 20% would be nice) but I would add the thought that all taxes should be collected by state government. If the counties or cities need money, the state should disburse down to them. Each state should also send money up to the Feds once a year.

The Federal government ought not to be seen as a cash cow -- they raid each and every paycheck whether we like it or not, then give it to whomever they please. I would be much happier having each state hold the purse strings, with the expectation that the Feds have to dance a bit more for their supper.

8 posted on 09/18/2009 8:13:53 AM PDT by ClearCase_guy (Play the Race Card -- lose the game.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Even conservatives won’t be able to save the blank slate theory.


9 posted on 09/18/2009 8:16:32 AM PDT by junta (Conservatives, the word "racism" is now ours.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Spending more money on failed education schemes will only get you more of what failed.


10 posted on 09/18/2009 8:18:56 AM PDT by TBP (Obama lies, Granny dies.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Gee, a big mystery. For the last 50 years government schools have been in an anti-virtuous cycle. Failure leads to more money which leads to more failure which leads to more money. What you reward you get more of.

Every parent knows that. Hell, it is fundamental human nature.

If we really wanted to fix things we would give more money to the more successful schools. But we really need to get the federal government out of education entirely.


11 posted on 09/18/2009 8:20:32 AM PDT by Truth is a Weapon (Truth, it hurts soooo good!)
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To: SeekAndFind

It doesn’t matter how much you spend if you have a faulty curriculum and bad teaching.


12 posted on 09/18/2009 8:42:01 AM PDT by kabumpo (Kabumpo)
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To: SeekAndFind
Just a few other notes about the KCMO public school district... As noted, the tax payers of KCMO were reluctant to increase their taxes. So judge Clark decided to do it for them. A federal judge ordered a tax increase on the residents of KCMO. No, I'm not kidding. Of course it was eventually overturned as unconstitutional by the SCOTUS, but a judge should have known better. In fact, Clark admitted knowing what he was doing was unconstitutional, but he felt that the issue was too important to be blocked by something as trivial as the Constitution of the United States. After his order was overturned, he simply ordered the city council to raise taxes, which they did. Since the city council did have the power to levy taxes, that was ok.

Another interesting thing to know is that many years ago (after spending more than 2 BILLION dollars on the school district) KCMO public school kids tested so poorly and had such a low graduation rate that the district lost its state accreditation. It's been years, and the district is still only "provisionally accredited." What this means is that no college in the country "has to" accept a graduate of the KCMO public school district.

Mark

13 posted on 09/18/2009 12:03:56 PM PDT by MarkL (Do I really look like a guy with a plan?)
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To: webboy45
You can find failure in any endevor.

The KCMO school board and city council have been an amazingly corrupt bunch of "little Napoleons," each protecting their own little fiefdoms for as long as I can remember.

Mark

14 posted on 09/18/2009 12:10:14 PM PDT by MarkL (Do I really look like a guy with a plan?)
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To: ClearCase_guy

Very interesting thought, but that would require a change to the Constitution, right? Not that it could not be done, but that would definitely be a sea change. How much would the State then give to the Feds?


15 posted on 09/18/2009 10:20:34 PM PDT by DennisR (Look around - God gives countless, indisputable, and unambiguous clues that He does, indeed, exist.)
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To: SeekAndFind

That is what happens when you prance around like a bunch of Kansas City faggots.


16 posted on 09/22/2009 8:22:00 PM PDT by John Will
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To: SeekAndFind

bump


17 posted on 09/22/2009 8:37:57 PM PDT by VOA
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