Let’s Have The Common Core Debate We Should Have Had In 2010

Those who follow education policy know that the Common Core State Standards are among the most controversial topics right now. The standards were adopted in 2010 and many states have been implementing them for years. Why all the fuss now? This is the question Rick Hess and Mike McShane, of the American Enterprise Institute, tackle in their recent piece, “What the Obamacare Debacle Tells Us About Common Core.” They write:

Where was all this anger when states were adopting the Common Core? Why is it boiling up now? Well, here’s one important clue: As Gallup reported this fall, 68 percent of Americans had never heard of the Common Core. States have spent two or three years planning to fundamentally alter how schools teach and test reading and math, but parents and teachers are only now encountering big changes that seemingly came out of the blue.

Common Core advocates have tended to dismiss unrest and concern as a function of parents and teachers being uninformed or misinformed. But whose fault is that? Portraying parents and teachers as ignorant, in this case, seems be a matter of blaming the victim. The real culprits are those who chose not to educate or engage the public, or those who did little to shed light on a quiet effort to pursue the “single greatest” educational change in a half-century.

Put plainly, the public had little access to information about the Common Core. A search of Lexis- Nexis’s repository of news articles from across the U.S. shows that 450 newspaper stories mentioned the “Common Core” in 2009, the year it was created.

Fast forward to August of 2013, when more than 3,000 stories were written about Common Core in a single month, “more than the number of stories that ran in 2009 and 2010 combined.”

Now that the public is attuned to the subject of Common Core, we have a chance for an honest debate about the merits of this reform effort. As Hess and McShane write, “Now that the debate has begun, advocates and reporters have a second chance to explain the substance, examine concerns, talk honestly about challenges and costs and ensure that the public has a chance to fully and fairly weigh the case for the Common Core.” Let’s have that debate.

Southwest Says MCI Terminal Plan is Too Expensive

Over the last few months, the Show-Me Institute has stated time and again that the Kansas City Aviation Department’s single terminal plan is more expensive than it needs to be. We have stated that it would increase the costs and reduce Kansas City International Airport’s competitiveness. But now Southwest Airlines, Kansas City Airport’s most important carrier, is saying it. As the Associated Press reported on Thursday, Southwest Executive Vice President Ron Ricks indicated that:

. . . its [Southwest’s] costs would spike under a $1.2 billion proposal for replacing the current three-terminal configuration at Kansas City International Airport with a single terminal . . . the single-terminal proposal would triple its costs . . .

And that:

. . . the $1.2 billion proposal would be a disincentive for airlines to service Kansas City . . . the airline is confident it [Kansas City Airport] could come up with something for the community at a lower cost.

Southwest Airlines handles 40 percent of the commercial flights (almost 2 million passengers in 2012) out of Kansas City, and the Aviation Department cannot take its opinion lightly. We are with Southwest in hoping that planners for Kansas City International Airport can come up with a more cost-effective plan.

Welcome To Show-Me Data

Yesterday, the Show-Me Institute proudly launched Show-Me Data. Show-Me Data is an interactive web tool that allows users to compare states in a variety of economic measures.

Have you ever wondered whether gasoline is cheaper on this side of the border or right across the state line? Show-Me Data can help you find out.

Not only can you compare various state tax rates, you can also see whether a state is gaining or losing population. You can also see how a state’s economy is performing relative to other states in the country.

We have included an introductory video on the site to show how you to get started. Please take a look and find the information that interests you the most.

Tax Credit Scholarships Leave Parents ‘Very Satisfied’

There is a new report out from the Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice, “More than Scores: An Analysis of Why and How Parents Choose Private Schools.” The study examines survey responses from 754 parents with students in Georgia’s GOAL Scholarship Program, an organization that awards scholarships under the state’s tax credit scholarship law.

Here are the some of the key findings:

  1. Surveyed parents were overwhelmingly satisfied with their private school choice, with 98.6 percent of  parents being “very satisfied” or “satisfied” with  their decision to send their children to a private school using a GOAL scholarship.
  2. The top five reasons parents chose a private school for their children are all related to school  climate and classroom management, including  “better student discipline” (50.9 percent), “better  learning environment” (50.8 percent), “smaller class  sizes” (48.9 percent), “improved student safety” (46.8 percent), and “more individual attention for  my child” (39.3 percent).
  3. Student performance on standardized test scores is  one of the least important pieces of information upon which parents base their decision regarding the private school to which they send their children. Only 10.2 percent of the parents who completed the survey listed higher standardized test scores as one of their top five reasons they chose a particular private school for their child.
  4. Contrary to the assertions of some school choice opponents, low-income parents, single parents, African-American parents, and parents with less than a college education are willing and able to be informed and active education consumers on behalf of their children.

This study is just another example of the benefits that can come from expanding school choice. Moreover, it helps demonstrate that tax credit scholarships can be an effective tool in expanding options for families. As I have written before, tax credit scholarships would be a great option for families in Missouri.

Morningline, Tuesdays on KWTO

James Shuls, Ph.D., Policy Analyst with the Show-Me Institute, talks with Tim Keithley of News Talk 560AM in Springfield, MO. Shuls and Keithley talk about how Missouri tax dollars are being used to keep taxes high.

Previously on Morningline:

 

The Re-Repackaging Of ‘Obamacaid’ In Missouri

One would think that at this point, the Affordable Care Act (ACA) would be an unwelcome topic in the Missouri Legislature. Along with all of the technical problems, the program’s website has actually been more effective at adding people to Medicaid rolls than it has been at getting people into private health insurance. Boosting rolls in a broken entitlement is bad enough, but expanding the pool of people who could join those rolls — which Obamacare would have Missouri do with Medicaid — would make matters even worse.

Thankfully, the state has not yet agreed to double down on Medicaid’s problems, but that doesn’t mean legislators won’t do their best to justify taking the Obamacare cash next year, hawking Medicaid plans they say aren’t “Obamacare”… but of course are. Early last month, the Wall Street Journal wrote an exceptional editorial about the coming marketing strategy with the headline “Obamacaid,” explaining exactly what’s coming down the pike in the state legislatures. (Emphasis mine.)

The feds are dangling the promise of paying for all the costs of the new beneficiaries, at least for the next three years. This subsidy honeypot can’t last forever, and Governors are right to worry about taking on fiscal obligations that will increase 13% on average in 2014 under new Medicaid, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation state budget survey.

The Beltway boys and their allies in the hospital industry who are ravenous for more federal revenue are stunned that their bribery failed. So the new line of assault is to declare that the 26 conscientious objector states must hate poor people, or racial minorities, or Saint Peter and Christianity itself.

…If the sojourners for Medicaid were serious about helping the least fortunate, they’d try to repair its current dysfunctions. Start by prioritizing spending, and then give Governors waivers to manage case loads and make operations more efficient.

But the truth is that liberals view Medicaid as a national model, not a national disgrace. Coverage on ObamaCare’s nominally private exchanges largely clones Medicaid’s narrow networks of doctors and hospitals, low reimbursements, limited patient choice and heavy federal regulation. It might be more accurate to call it Obamacaid.

Medicaid reform is laudable and necessary, but proposals being circulated in Jefferson City seem to put the cart before the horse. The buzzword being used in Missouri to get the expansion over the top is “Medicaid transformation,” but the proposals almost invariably start with a demand for Medicaid expansion, with the prospect of reform a secondary consideration. “Reform,” in the present construction, only happens with expansion.

That’s an utterly unacceptable prioritization of policy objectives. Medicaid is a broken program rife with waste, fraud and abuse, and may in some cases be worse for its patients than if they were completely uninsured. Compassion demands fixing a broken program, not forcing even more people into it. And that’s to say nothing of the fiscal irresponsibility of using public debt indefinitely to deliver contemporaneous benefits.

Moreover, it is perplexing that some of the same people pushing a giant expansion of government through Medicaid also opposed allowing doctors to give free care to patients earlier this year. To be blunt: What sort of a worldview supports the expansion of a broken government bureaucracy and, at the same time, tries to prevent doctors from freely attending to the medical needs of their fellow Americans? It’s an incredible contrast.

If proponents of a “transformation” aren’t willing to reform Medicaid without an expansion, then I think it’s fair to assume that they’d be about as happy to have the expansion without reform. That should be a non-starter. I hope that the leaders of the Medicaid “transformation” groups can and will proceed with reform but without expansion as a prerequisite.

Missouri Students: Still Stuck In The Middle

2013-naep-gains

Last fall, I wrote about how Missouri’s education system was stuck in the middle and showing little sign of improvement. On a number of assessments, we rank right in the middle of the pack. This week, the most recent scores for the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) were released. Once again, we rank in the middle.

The press release from the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE) suggests that Missouri’s scores are holding steady. That is true, our scores are relatively unchanged. But while we hold steady, many other states are showing significant learning gains. Missouri showed a net gain of 2.5 points on fourth- and eighth-grade reading and math. Meanwhile, Washington, D.C., gained a net of 22.2 points. Add D.C. to the 27 states that made larger gains than Missouri, placing us below the national average for growth.

We are still stuck and something must be done.

(Hat tip to Matt Ladner for the graph.)

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