Why didn't Audrey Johnson tell us anything about "...the research [which] 
shows that student achievement can be accurately measured as follows: 49% 
attributed to parent involvement, about 42% teacher quality, and about 8% to 
class size?"

To which study is Ms. Johnson referring?  It must be an old study because one 
of the cited references is a book published in 1977.   

One of the most frequently cited studies about the influence of schools and a 
students home life on academic achievement was a 1966 study by James Coleman 
and others entitled "Equality of Educational Opportunity."  According to 
Coleman et. al:

"Schools bring little influence to bear on a child's achievement that is 
independent of his background and general social context; and that this very 
lack of an independent effect
means that the inequalities imposed on children by their home, neighborhood, 
and peer environment are carried along to become the inequalities with which 
they confront adult life at the end of school [The Manufactured Crisis, 1995, 
Berliner and Biddle, page 71]"

That's the conclusion upon which the Minneapolis School District bases its 
policies.  That's why Minneapolis School District spokespersons and 
cheerleaders say that the schools are doing a pretty good job.  It is to be 
expected that a majority of students don't pass the Minnesota Basic Standards 
Test on their first try, and only 37% graduate on time.  Smart kids will do 
well in any school.  It just happens that smart kids are heavily concentrated 
in certain community schools that serve low-poverty neighborhoods, and less 
concentrated in others, or so the argument goes.

The conclusions of the original Coleman Report about the influence of a 
student's background on academic achievement are generally accepted by 
policy-makers.  It just happens to support the agenda of the neo-conservative 
and neo-liberal school reform movements.  

However, six years after the original Coleman Report was issued, Coleman 
published reanalyzes of its data using "regression" procedures. (A 
"regression" procedure is a one-step analysis that estimates the net effect 
of each variable while controlling for the effects of the other variables.)  
Based on the reanalyzes, Coleman concluded that the original report gave an 
inflated estimate of the influence of home background due to unexamined 
effects of school characteristics.  Coleman's later work has been swept under 
the rug [ibid Berliner and Biddle, p 73].   

-Doug Mann

Doug Mann for School Board web site:
<http://educationright.tripod.com>
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