密西西比州不可能有好学校。
Mississippi Can't Possibly Have Good Schools

原始链接: https://www.educationdaly.us/p/mississippi-cant-possibly-have-good

长期以来,美国南部深受教育和其他指标表现不佳的困扰,但如今却出现了令人惊讶的学术逆转,密西西比州和路易斯安那州尤为突出。密西西比州的阅读成绩有了显著提高,尤其是非裔学生,甚至超过了像威斯康星州这样资金雄厚的州。路易斯安那州也弥补了疫情期间的学习损失,阿拉巴马州的数学成绩甚至超过了疫情前的水平。 尽管取得了这些进步,但由于偏见和傲慢,人们仍然不愿承认并学习这些成功经验。当“蓝州”正在失去优势和国会席位时,“红州”的教育数据却有所改善。 这种拒绝承认各州之间成功教育模式的做法阻碍了整体进步,并导致无效策略的持续存在。这也为共和党人利用教育政策提供了机会。作者还提到了印第安纳州和爱荷华州是值得关注的州。由于地区偏见而忽视这些成功案例,最终损害了学生利益,并造成了资源浪费。

Hacker News上的一篇文章赞扬了密西西比州教育指标的改善,引发了热烈讨论。评论者们就人口统计调整后的分数的有效性展开了辩论,一些人认为关注原始分数可以看出密西西比州的教育水平仍然在全国处于倒数之列。另一些人则强调,在评估学校表现和教育政策成果时,必须考虑社会经济因素。人们担心统计数据可能被操纵,以及政治偏见在解读教育数据中的作用。 一些用户指出了密西西比州的具体干预措施,例如将学生留级到三年级以及专注于核心学术教学,而另一些人则认为“密西西比奇迹”被夸大了。一些人对这个好消息感到惊讶,因为他们过去对密西西比州的教育体系有过负面经历。总的来说,讨论集中在衡量教育进步的复杂性、外部因素对学生成绩的影响以及政治框架在教育报道中的作用。
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原文

Painting the Deep South as an embarrassing cultural backwater is one of the last socially acceptable forms of prejudice among elites. It’s not just tolerated - it’s venerated.

Mississippi is probably the top target. I don’t have to tell you why. You know about the poor health outcomes. The poverty. The corruption. The obesity. The confederacy stuff.

Wikipedia has an entry dedicated to the phrase “Thank God for Mississippi” because its horrible performance on so many metrics saves other states the embarrassment of finishing last. The term has been used since at least 1945.

Which has made it awkward in recent years as Mississippi has become the fastest improving school system in the country.

You read that right. Mississippi is taking names.

In 2003, only the District of Columbia had more fourth graders in the lowest achievement level on our national reading test (NAEP) than Mississippi. By 2024, only four states had fewer.

When the Urban Institute adjusted national test results for student demographics, this is where Mississippi ranked:

How about Black students? The root of Mississippi’s bad reputation is its historically awful record on civil rights - including its refusal to integrate schools.

That was then.

Now, it has a different story to tell. Black students in Mississippi posted the third highest fourth grade reading scores in the nation. They walloped their counterparts in better-funded states. The average Black student in Mississippi performed about 1.5 grade levels ahead of the average Black student in Wisconsin. Just think about that for a moment. Wisconsin spends about 35 percent more per pupil to achieve worse results.

Mississippi has fellow southern stars. Louisiana was the only state to fully erase pandemic learning loss among fourth grade readers. It ranked in the top five for all four NAEP grades/subjects in the demographically adjusted results. Alabama was the only state whose fourth graders beat their pre-COVID performance in math. In years past, notable gains have been posted by Florida, Tennessee and Texas.

These successes have not been wholly unacknowledged. They have been dutifully and perfunctorily name-checked in news stories. Nonetheless, there has been, shall we say, a reluctance among national voices to extol Deep South examples as worthy of emulation by their so-called “better off” peers.

You can’t go around saying Maine ought to visit Mississippi to learn how to teach reading. It’s insulting. You could ruin a cocktail party. After all, Maine has Kennebunkport. Mississippi has Biloxi.

But that’s exactly what should happen. Below are the reading scores for these two states over time. For context, 10 points on NAEP is approximately the equivalent of one grade level. In 2002, students in Mississippi were two years behind students in Maine. Today, they are about a year ahead.

Don’t you want to know how that happened? Me too.

There’s a much broader trend afoot. This spring, Paul Peterson and Michael Hartney showed that red states (as defined by 2024 presidential election votes) are overtaking their blue counterparts academically. In 2019, blue states had higher average NAEP scores on all four major tests (4th and 8th grade reading and math). By 2024, red states had taken the lead in three of the four.

With such striking patterns, one would expect some of these red states to be the hottest ticket in education. Reporters embedding in steamy southern capitals to write long form magazine profiles of crusading state chiefs. National commissions chaired by governors. Awards distributed at fancy black-tie dinners.

But none of that is happening. Because these are SEC states.

More often, there have been sloppy attempts at debunking Mississippi’s success. Some of them ran in national papers. Others were withdrawn when the authors realized they were based on flawed information.

This isn’t just wrong. It’s a problem. There are lessons for our education community and for both political parties.

  • We miss opportunities to help kids. I’m not saying we should go “full Finland” and turn Mississippi into a junket destination and object of hero worship. It’s not perfect. But we need to celebrate their thoughtful statewide strategy that has dramatically improved results without a colossal increase in spending. Their progress is not a fluke. It’s a clue.

  • Underperforming states escape scrutiny. Our biases prevent us from asking, for instance, what’s going on in Oregon. Or Vermont. Or Maryland. There’s a case to be made that their instructional quality is among the weakest in the country based on their performance trends over the past decade. And yet, when’s the last time you heard them being pressed to defend their poor outcomes? They’re getting a pass.

  • Our federal system becomes a weakness rather than a strength. Devolving most education authority to states theoretically allows innovation based on local needs. But it also presumes that successful practices will catch on with lagging states. That’s not happening. Instead, mediocre and low performing states are living in denial, cherry picking small wins to avoid confronting larger truths. This is one reason that the Every Student Succeeds Act, passed in 2015 and focused on reducing federal accountability, is increasingly seen as a colossal mistake.

  • We waste money. Education spending has risen significantly over the past decade, partly due to COVID relief funding. But student outcomes have not risen. In fact, they’ve gotten worse. When states refuse to learn from peers because of a condescending attitude, they pour resources into failed strategies - and then ask taxpayers for more. This (probably) can’t go on forever. Some elected officials are beginning to reach their limit.

Blue states are losing population. Estimates vary, but states Kamala Harris won in 2024 will probably surrender 12 congressional seats - and electoral votes - after the next census.

Given that reality, Democrats picked a terrible time to go AWOL on the issue of education. Harris barely mentioned schools during her campaign and did not put forth any plan to address the incredible academic losses of the COVID era. What was once a double-digit lead in voter trust on education has now become a dead heat or a slight advantage for Republicans.

There is a future where blue states are left behind electorally, through declining clout, and educationally, through stubborn refusal to accept that a number of red states are solving important problems and expanding opportunity for kids while wealthier, complacent Democratic strongholds phone it in. If Republicans start running - and winning - on their education track records, look out.

A few politicians have caught on. Rahm Emanuel recently called on Democrats to apologize for the excessive length of pandemic school closures. Colorado Gov. Jared Polis described this as an “all-hands-on-deck” moment. Sen. Michael Bennet has hinted that party leaders need to step aside so a new generation of ideas can win back voters who are defecting. All three of them see education as an issue where Democrats ought to be winning - but aren’t. My guess is that successful future Democratic policies sound more like them and less like Brandon Johnson.

Success in education is hard to sustain. Time and distraction wreak havoc on gains that took decades to achieve. Ask Finland. Or Florida.

Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama climbed the charts because they focused on core academic instruction when much of the country used ESSA as an excuse to focus on anything and everything else. It paid off.

But it won’t be easy for red states to continue their impressive run when President Trump is firing off scattershot executive orders advancing culture war priorities that have little to do with student learning. Governors and state chiefs are getting dizzy keeping up with the things they are supposed to do. Polling suggests that moves like cutting every possible position and program at the Department of Education are unpopular. This could go south - no pun intended - in a hurry… especially if Democrats wake up and remember that education policy is a natural winner for them.

Not all the serious education players are in the Deep South. Two that you should watch - Indiana and Iowa - are midwestern states that Barack Obama won in 2008. More recently, though, they’ve gone for Donald Trump three times in a row.

Indiana and Iowa are already in the Urban Institute’s top 10 for at least one NAEP test. They have innovative superintendents who mean business. And they are committed to leveraging the flexibility the Trump administration has promised.

If they rock the next decade of NAEP results, will they be overlooked in the national conversation because they are too farm-y, too milquetoast, too difficult for coastal people to locate on a map?

Probably. And it will be our loss.

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