Economic education as public policy: the determinants of state-level mandates.
Grimes, Paul W. ; Millea, Meghan J.
ABSTRACT
This paper presents an empirical examination of the factors that
influence a state's decision to mandate the teaching of economics
within the K-12 curriculum. 38 states currently require some form of
economics instruction within their approved curriculum. A binary choice
probit model was estimated to determine the relationship between a
variety of socioeconomic, political and policy environment variables in
the decision to implement and maintain an economic education mandate.
The results indicate that the number of university-based centers for
economic education and the number of parents belonging to state
parent-teacher associations positively affect the mandate choice. The
incidence of poverty was found to be negatively associated with a
state's requirement to include economics within the curriculum.
These and other results highlight the need for additional research into
the aggregate effects of required investments in economic human capital.
INTRODUCTION
Most academic economists share the belief that formal training in
the discipline and the "economic way of thinking" are valuable
investments in human capital for the individual and for society. It is
widely argued that economic literacy results in the ability of
individuals to make better choices --whether in the marketplace or in
the polling booth. More than 30 years ago, Nobel laureate George Stigler
(1970) reasoned that economically literate citizens are better able to
make decisions about educational investments, job opportunities,
personal finances, and politics, and that better individual decisions
ultimately result in stronger societal outcomes. The National Council on
Economic Education (NCEE) and its network of state councils and local
centers have advocated arguments based on this theme since its
conception in 1949. (1) Although the efforts of the NCEE and other
advocacy groups have increased the degree and quality of economics
education available in our nation's schools, recent studies
indicate a startling degree of economic illiteracy still exists among
the general public (Dahl, 1998). For example, the Federal Reserve Bank
of Minneapolis conducted a national survey concerning basic economic
concepts with respondents answering correctly only 45% of the time
(Federal Reserve, 1998). Results such as this suggest that many schools
may not yet provide an adequate degree of instruction in economics.
At any point in time, it is difficult to determine the overall
extent of economics instruction within the curriculum of the
nation's K-12 schools (Bragaw & Hartoonian, 1983; Walstad,
2001). In general, the states' central educational authority
(usually a state Department of Education) constructs and issues an
approved framework for the curriculum leaving local school boards and
administrators only minor discretionary choices. Each state's
central educational authority is held accountable by state legislators
and other officials elected statewide; and local school boards are
usually directly elected or appointed by locally elected office holders.
Currently, 38 states mandate the teaching of economic concepts within
their approved K-12 curriculum (up from only 28 states in 1991). (2)
Only 13 of these states formally require a course in economics for high
school graduation (Dempsey, 2000; Walstad, 2001). To date, economists
have failed to evaluate the long-run effect of required economics
instruction on individual outcomes such as income, educational
attainment and employment. There is, however, some evidence to suggest
that mandated economic education is important at the aggregate level.
Grimes and Lee (2000) report that states with mandated economic
education courses experienced significantly greater rates of growth in
their gross state product than states without a mandate over the
1982-1997 time period. This observed association should be viewed with
caution as the limitations of currently available data make it
impossible to isolate and directly measure the effects of specific
investments in economic education on aggregates of economic growth.
However, given the documented degree of economic illiteracy and the
potential benefits of economics instruction, it is important to
understand why some states mandate economic education in their schools
while others do not. The purpose of this paper is to examine the factors
that influence the mandate choice.
STATE MANDATES
The 38 states that currently mandate the formal inclusion of
economics within their K-12 curriculum are shown in Figure 1. Even
between those with mandates, the degree to which school systems are
required to provide economics instruction varies from state to state and
school district to school district.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
Some states specifically require a formal course in economics while
others allow for economics content to be integrated within other social
studies courses (e.g. history, government, etc.) or infused elsewhere
within the curriculum. The grade levels at which economics instruction
are to occur also vary with a few states requiring economics content
throughout the K-12 curriculum while others restrict it to senior high
school. It is also important to recognize that the degree to which
school systems are held accountable for their instruction in economics
vary across states. Some states require competency testing of students
and others do not. In some states that do require testing, the outcomes
are used in determining the allocation of resources between school
districts, while in others, test scores are only used as benchmarks and
for future goal-setting activities. Given the variety of potential
mandate regimes, we use the broadest and most inclusive definition for
our analysis. (3) A state is determined to have an economic education
mandate if the state's department of education requires any type of
formal instruction in economics within its approved K-12 curriculum.
Researchers in economic education have investigated the effect of
state mandates on the effectiveness of economics instruction. The
relationship between a state imposed mandate and student learning is
complex. In states where a mandate exists, teachers are likely to have
more training and experience in the subject and have greater access to
resources to support their teaching, relative to teachers in non-mandate
states. Additionally, state imposed curriculum requirements may also
influence the attitudes of teachers toward the subject, and not always
in a positive manner. An analysis by Marlin (1991) of the National
Assessment of Economic Education (NAEE) database revealed that the
degree of student learning in economics is strongly linked to teacher
attitudes and that the existence of a state mandate diminished teacher
attitudes, ceteris paribus. However, Marlin also found that additional
training in economics improved teacher attitudes toward the subject and
that teachers in mandate states had greater access to such training.
This is consistent with an earlier study by Rhine (1989), which found
that the factors that positively influence student learning in economics
vary according to the mandate status of the student's home state.
Rhine's results showed that performance was enhanced for students
in mandate states when their teachers had obtained additional formal
training in economics, however, in non-mandate states, previous years of
teaching experience in the subject proved to be a more important
determinant of student performance. While studies such as these
demonstrate that mandates result in observable and measurable outcomes
that influence the formation of economic human capital, they do not
attempt to explore the factors that result in the imposition of a state
mandate.
THE EMPIRICAL MODEL
The underlying factors which determine the course of public policy
have long been studied by economists and political scientists alike, and
the resulting empirical literature suggests that a number of broad
factors are potentially important determinants of state policies such as
educational curriculum mandates. Some researchers have viewed the
empirical state policy literature as a "contest" between
political variables and socioeconomic and environmental variables as
competing explanations for public policy choices (see for example,
Wright, Erikson, and McIver, 1987). In many cases, socioeconomic factors
are found to be better predictors of policy decisions than political
factors. However, because of the inter-dependence between such factors
in a representative democracy, most empirical models do not limit their
scope to one set of explanatory variables. It is important to control
for the existing policy environment as well as the major socioeconomic
and political factors that may influence policy choice.
Our model is built upon the research tradition established by Crain
(1979) and Benson and Engin (1988) who treat the enactment of
legislation and public policy as the end result of a market process.
Within the context of state educational mandates, a number of special
interest groups can be identified as potential sources of demand for
inclusion of economics in the state-approved school curriculum--parents,
university centers for economic education, advocates for economic
development, etc. The relative degree to which these demands are
manifest is a function of the state's existing socioeconomic and
public policy environments. The approval and retention of a state
mandate by policy makers, held accountable by elected officials, may be
modeled as a response to this demand. Thus, in the spirit of the
empirical state policy literature, the following functional relationship
was posited:
MANDATE = f (R, P, S) [1]
where, MANDATE is a categorical variable reflecting the existence
of a state imposed economic education mandate, R is a vector of
environmental variables reflecting the availability of resources to
support a mandate, P is a vector of variables reflecting the relevant
policy environment, and S is a vector of variables representing the
socioeconomic and political context. The specification of each variable
included in the model can be found in Table 1 according to category. (4)
The mean and standard deviation for each variable are reported in Table
2 according to state mandate status and in total. As specified, the
model indicates that states face a simple binary choice--either to
require school systems in the state to teach economics or to not require
the teaching of economics. Thus, the model was estimated using standard
probit analysis. (Note that we are not modeling the initial decision to
mandate economics instruction--those decisions were made at different
times across each state over the past 25 years--we are modeling the
states' choice to maintain and enforce a statewide curriculum
mandate during our sample year. (5))
EMPIRICAL RESULTS
Before turning to the probit results, it is interesting to note
some of the obvious similarities and differences between the mandate and
non-mandate state groups revealed in Table 2. First, there is no
significant difference across mandate status in the mean per pupil
public expenditure on K-12 education (EXPENDITURES), but this is not
true for the other resource variable, CENTERS. States with a mandate
have nearly three times the number of NCEE-affiliated university centers
to train teachers. About two-thirds of all states use competency testing
but mandate states report the use of high school exit exams twice as
often as non-mandate states. The mean incidence of childhood poverty
appears to be slightly greater in non-mandate states while the degree of
parental involvement in school activities, as measured by membership in
state Parent Teacher Associations, is significantly higher in states
which mandate economic education. The a priori expected sign for these
and the other variables are also reported.
The resulting probit equation from estimation of [1] is reported in
Table 3. The model yielded a relatively good fit of the data with a
significant log-likelihood statistic of -8.3639 and a Psuedo R2
(percentage of correct predictions) of .9000. Most of the independent
variables obtained coefficients of the expected sign and were
significant using the appropriate one-tailed test. Given the
specification of the probit equation, the independent variable
coefficients indicate the influence of the respective variable on the
conditional probability that a state has enacted and maintained
requirements for economic education within the approved K-12 curriculum.
Looking first at the resource variables, EXPENDITURES was included
in the model to reflect the fact that curriculum mandates are costly.
Additional resources may be necessary to produce and deliver instruction
in an area that may not otherwise be part of a school's curriculum.
However, the EXPENDITURES coefficient entered the model with a negative
and insignificant sign. Thus, the degree of per pupil spending does not
appear to be related to the mandate choice, and of the two resource
variables, only CENTERS was found to positively and significantly affect
the probability that a state has chosen to implement required economic
education.
As seen in Table 3, the number of NCEE-affiliated university
centers was found to be positively associated with the choice of
imposing and maintaining an economic education mandate. Without the
establishment of university-based centers and the valuable activities
they perform, economic education mandates may have little chance for
survival (MacDowell, 1986). Without a mechanism to train teachers and
promote economic education, a state is less likely to support a mandate
(Kourilsky & Bruno, 1992). Thus, the number of centers may be viewed
as an important factor in implementing and maintaining a mandate.
The two policy measures included in the model were the categorical
TESTING and EXIT EXAM variables. TESTING reflects the existence of
required student competency testing. The type of testing and the grade
levels at which it is performed vary across states. However, as
specified here, the requirement of competency testing may be viewed as a
substitute for curriculum mandates. Instead of mandating school
districts to offer classes in specified subjects, some states simply
require a test, or series of tests, and allow the individual school
districts to devise curriculums that meet the desired goals. This
relationship is reflected in the negative and significant coefficient
obtained by the TESTING variable reported in Table 3. While a required
exit exam for high school graduation provides some of the same
functions, in practice it is more of a complement to mandated curriculum
requirements. Whereas competency testing occurs at various points within
the overall curriculum, high school exit exams occur only upon
completion of the curriculum. Exit exams are therefore designed to
capture student understanding within the broad range of subjects covered
by the overall curriculum. Exit exams are used by states and school
districts to determine if their requirements have been met upon
completion of the curriculum by students. Thus, the positive and
statistically significant EXIT EXAM coefficient reported in Table 3 was
expected.
Turning to the socioeconomic variables, POVERTY was found to have a
significant negative affect on the probability that a state mandates
economic education, ceteris paribus. Thus, higher rates of childhood
poverty within a state are associated with public schools that are less
likely to offer required economics instruction. Given that economic
growth is strongly correlated with lower rates of poverty, this result
is consistent with the previously discussed findings of Grimes and Lee
(2000), which showed that mandate states demonstrated higher rates of
economic growth during recent years. Findings such as this indicate the
potential importance of economic literacy as proxied by requirements for
economic education within the K-12 curriculum. In the war on poverty,
economic education may be one weapon that is overlooked by many
policymakers.
Another important socioeconomic variable that affects the
probability that a state will mandate economics instruction is the
number of parents actively involved in school activities. This was
proxied by the PARENTS variable, which measures the number of parents
belonging to local chapters of the Parent Teacher Association (PTA)
within each state. As seen in Table 3, PARENTS was found to have a
positive and significant coefficient. Thus, the results indicate that
more parental involvement in the activities of the schools results in a
greater likelihood that the state will mandate a curriculum which
requires economics instruction. (6) This finding is consistent with the
popular push by parental groups to strengthen the nation's schools
by incorporating curriculums which prepare children for the demands of
modern life.
The estimated coefficient on the variable designed to capture the
prevailing state political environment, REPUBLICAN, indicates that
states with a Republican governor are more likely to have an economic
education mandate. This is consistent with the current Republican
educational agenda which has called for schools to be more accountable
and to prepare students for the world of work. A vector of regional
dummy variables was also included in the model to capture any
differences in the socioeconomic environment that may systematically
vary across the nation. Table 3 indicates that only the MIDWEST
variable's coefficient was found to be significant. The negative
sign indicates that midwestern states are less likely to mandate
economic education than those in the northeast (the omitted reference
region), ceteris paribus. This is consistent with the observation that
many midwestern states have a longstanding reputation for local, not
state, control of schools.
CONCLUSIONS
A binary choice probit model was estimated to determine the
relationship between a variety of socioeconomic, political and policy
environment variables in the decision of states to implement and
maintain an economic education mandate for K-12 education. The results
revealed several interesting and important relationships. First, a
statewide requirement for economics instruction is positively associated
with the number of university-based centers for economic education that
operate within the state. These centers, which are affiliated with the
NCEE, provide the teacher training and curriculum development used to
support the teaching of economics within a state's school systems.
The results of the model suggest that these centers are a significant
component of the infrastructure needed to maintain a mandate. States
that are considering an economic education mandate should be aware of
this important relationship. Additionally, this result may indicate that
university-based centers are effective at creating a public demand for
economics instruction in the schools of their state. Second, the
state's decision to use either competency testing or high school
exit exams appear to affect the choice of requiring economics
instruction in the K-12 curriculum. The results suggest that competency
testing may serve as a substitute for curriculum mandates while exit
exams appear to be used as a complement to such requirements. Third, the
economic conditions within a state were found to be associated with the
mandate choice. Specifically, states with higher rates of poverty among
children were less likely to mandate economic education than those
states with relatively low rates of poverty. If economic education
mandates do improve overall economic literacy (and this has yet to be
determined), then this result suggests that states may be able to
promote economic growth through investments in economic human capital.
Much more work is needed to verify this possible aggregate relationship.
Finally, parental involvement in the educational system was found to be
a significant positive determinant of state mandates for economic
education. Organizations, such as the PTA, which reflect the special
interests of parents appear to stimulate the demand for inclusion of
economic instruction in the public schools. Recent calls for greater
parental involvement within the nation's schools may have
significant influence on the curriculum choices made by state
departments of education.
Although economists have spilled much ink over the years trying to
determine which factors influence student learning in their classrooms,
very little work has been done on the consequences of that learning. The
requirement of economic instruction in a majority of states' school
systems indicates that there is a strong belief that positive benefits
will flow from this policy choice. While this paper has tried to shed
some light on the determinants of economic education mandates, much more
work is needed to uncover the aggregate effects of such policies.
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ENDNOTES
(1) Formerly known as the Joint Council on Economic Education, the
NCEE is a non-profit organization that promotes economic literacy
through curriculum materials development and teacher training programs
conducted by more than 250 university-based centers nationwide.
(2) All information concerning state mandate status was taken from
a survey maintained by the Center for Economic Education at James
Madison University and published on their website. Retrieved July 20,
1999 from http://cob.jmu.edu/econed/mandates/
(3) The NCEE has extensively documented the various mandate regimes
that exist across the states (Dempsey, 2000). Given the heterogeneity in
state curriculum requirements and implementation at the local level, we
define "mandate" based upon the survey, referenced above, of
professional in-state educators who are most likely to be informed about
actual practices within their state's school systems. Strict
restriction of the mandate definition to include only those states which
require a course in economics for high school graduation does not
materially alter the empirical results presented later in this paper.
(Specification tests of the model using this definition are available
upon request of the authors.)
(4) The data sources for each of the independent variables in the
probit model are as follows: EXPENDITURES - Digest of Education
Statistics, 1999, Tables 164 and 40. Retrieved March 29, 2001 from
http://www.nces.ed.gov/pubs2000/Digest99/
CENTERS--National Directory of Affiliated Councils and Centers,
1999, (New York: National Council on Economic Education).
TESTING--Digest of Education Statistics, 1999, Table 158. Retrieved
March 29, 2001 from http://www.nces.ed.gov/pubs2000/Digest99/
EXIT EXAM--Digest of Education Statistics, 1999, Table 157.
Retrieved March 29, 2001 from http://www.nces.ed.gov/pubs2000/Digest99/
POVERTY--State and County Quick Facts, U.S. Census Bureau.
Retrieved May 25, 2001 from http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/index.html/
PARENTS--Membership numbers were collected via e-mail and telephone
contact with individual state Parent Teacher Association offices.
Observations for Connecticut and New Jersey were interpolated via
regression analysis due to unavailable data.
REPUBLICAN--Provided by Republican Governors Association. Retrieved
March 19, 2001 from http://rga.policy.net/
REGION--Bureau of the Census. Retrieved March 19, 2001 from
http://census.gov/
(5) In this respect our analysis is analogous to the recent work by
Mixon and Gibson (2001) that examines the retention of state level
concealed handgun laws.
(6) Analysis of the data reveal that PARENTS is highly correlated
with relevant measures of state population, therefore, it could be
argued that PARENTS serves as a proxy for state size. Various
specification tests were conducted which replaced the PARENTS variable
with measures of the overall state population and more refined measures
of the adult population by educational attainment. The results suggest
that the relationships reported here are stable. Perhaps a more
appropriate specification of the degree of parental involvement is the
percentage of parents who are organized by the PTA or other special
interest group organizations. Given the variations in age distributions,
family size, birth rates, and school enrollment levels across states, a
variable of this specification could not be reliably constructed given
the data that is readily available.
Paul W. Grimes, Mississippi State University
Meghan J. Millea, Mississippi State University
Table 1: Specification of Variables
Variable Label Specification
Dependent Variable
MANDATE 1 = State requires formal instruction in
economics within K-12 curriculum;
0 = otherwise.
R Variables
EXPENDITURES Per pupil public expenditure on K-12 state
educational system. (1999 dollars)
CENTERS Number of NCEE-affiliated economic education
centers in state.
P Variables
TESTING 1 = Minimum competency testing by state; 0 =
otherwise.
EXIT EXAM 1 = High school exit exam required by state for
graduation; 0 = otherwise.
S Variables
POVERTY % of state's children living in households with
income below poverty threshold.
PARENTS Number of parents belonging to the state Parent
Teacher Association (PTA), in thousands.
REPUBLICAN 1 = Governor of state belongs to Republican
Party; 0 = otherwise.
SOUTH 1 = State located in Southern census region;
0 = otherwise.
WEST 1 = State located in Western census region;
0 = otherwise.
MIDWEST 1 = State located in Midwestern census region;
0 = otherwise.
NORTHEAST 1 = State located in Northeastern census region;
0 = otherwise.
All data reflect 1999-2000, or closest academic year, values.
Table 2: Mean and Standard Deviation for Variables by State Mandate
Status
Non-Mandate
Variable Mandate States States Total
MANDATE 1.0000 0.0000 0.7600
(0.0000) (0.0000) (0.4314)
EXPENDITURES [+] 6304.1591 6291.3596 6301.0872
(1187.8474) (1788.6566) (1335.5426)
CENTERS [+] 6.3158 2.0833 5.3000
(4.9380) (11.5643) (4.7219)
TESTING [-] 0.6579 0.6667 0.6600
(0.4808) (0.4924) (0.4785)
EXIT EXAM [+] 0.5263 0.2500 0.4600
(0.5060) (0.4523) (0.5035)
POVERTY [-] 17.9763 19.2417 18.2800
(4.1497) (4.9963) (4.3480)
PARENTS [+] 160.1515 18.8287 126.2341
(221.3503) (19.5177) (201.9895)
REPUBLICAN [+] 0.6063 0.7500 0.6400
(0.4954) (0.4523) (0.4849)
SOUTH [+/-] 0.3684 0.1666 0.3200
(0.4889) (0.3892) (0.4712)
WEST [+/-] 0.2368 0.3333 0.2600
(0.4309) (0.4924) (0.4431)
MIDWEST [+/-] 0.2368 0.2500 0.2400
(0.4309) (0.4523) (0.4314)
NORTHEAST [+/-] 0.1579 0.2500 0.1800
(0.3695) (0.4523) (0.3881)
N 38 12 50
[] - Expected sign
Table 3: Probit Estimates: Determinants of State-Level Economic
Education Mandates
Variable Coefficient Standard Error
Constant 17.7946 10.9041
EXPENDITURES -0.0006 0.0005
CENTERS 0.3475 * 0.2526
TESTING -3.8783 ** 2.3129
EXIT EXAM 2.4098 * 1.7554
POVERTY -0.9889 ** 0.6037
PARENTS 0.1078 ** 0.0664
REPUBLICAN 2.3292 * 1.7538
SOUTH 2.8219 3.3852
WEST 2.5867 2.0635
MIDWEST -4.6569 * 3.0715
N 50
Log-Likelihood -8.3639
Pseudo [R.sup.2] 0.9000
** Statistically significant at the .05 level, one-tailed test.
* Statistically significant at the .10 level, one-tailed test.