Good news for New Orleans: early evidence shows reforms lifting student achievement.
N. Harris, Douglas
What happened to the New Orleans public schools following the
tragic levee breeches after Hurricane Katrina is truly unprecedented.
Within the span of one year, all public-school employees were fired, the
teacher contract expired and was not replaced, and most attendance zones
were eliminated. The state took control of almost all public schools and
began holding them to relatively strict standards of academic
achievement. Over time, the state turned all the schools under its
authority over to charter management organizations (CMOs) that, in turn,
dramatically reshaped the teacher workforce.
A few states and districts nationally have experimented with one or
two of these reforms; many states have increased the number of charter
schools, for example. But no city had gone as far on any one of these
dimensions or considered trying all of them at once. New Orleans
essentially erased its traditional school district and started over. In
the process, the city has provided the first direct test of an
alternative to the system that has dominated American public education
for more than a century.
Dozens of districts around the country are citing the New Orleans
experience to justify their own reforms. In addition to being hailed by
Democratic president Barack Obama and Louisiana's Republican
governor, Bobby Jindal, parliamentary delegations from at least two
countries have visited the city to learn about its schools.
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The unprecedented nature of the reforms and level of national and
international attention by themselves make the New Orleans experience a
worthy topic of analysis and debate. But also consider that the
underlying principles are what many reformers have dreamed about for
decades--that schools would be freed from most district and union
contract rules and allowed to innovate. They would be held accountable
not for compliance but for results.
There is clearly a lot of hype. The question is, are the reforms
living up to it? Specifically, how did the reforms affect school
practices and student learning? My colleagues and I at the Education
Research Alliance for New Orleans (ERA-New Orleans) at Tulane University
have carried out a series of studies to answer these and other
questions. Our work is motivated by the sheer scale of the Katrina
tragedy and the goal of supporting students, educators, and city leaders
in their efforts to make the city's schools part of the city's
revitalization effort. The rest of the country wants to know how well
the New Orleans school reforms have worked. But the residents of New
Orleans deserve to know. Here's what we can tell them so far.
Before the Storm
Assessing the effects of this policy experiment involves comparing
the effectiveness of New Orleans schools before and after the reforms.
As in most districts, before Hurricane Katrina, an elected board set New
Orleans district policies and selected superintendents, who hired
principals to run schools. Principals hired teachers, who worked under a
union contract. Students were assigned to schools based mainly on
attendance zones.
The New Orleans public school district was highly dysfunctional. In
2003, a private investigator found that the district system, which had
about 8,000 employees, inappropriately provided checks to nearly 4,000
people and health insurance to 2,000 people. In 2004, the Federal Bureau
of Investigation (FBI) issued indictments against 11 people for criminal
offenses against the district related to financial mismanagement. Eight
superintendents served between 1998 and 2005, lasting on average just 11
months.
This dysfunction, combined with the socioeconomic background of
city residents--83 percent of students were eligible for free or
reduced-price lunch--contributed to poor academic results. In the
2004-05 school year, Orleans Parish public schools ranked 67th out of 68
Louisiana districts in math and reading test scores. The graduation rate
was 56 percent, at least 10 percentage points below the state average.
As a result, some reforms were already under way when Katrina hit
in August 2005. The state-run Recovery School District (RSD) had already
been created to take over low-performing New Orleans schools. The state
had appointed an emergency financial manager to handle the
district's finances. There were some signs of improvement in
student outcomes just before the storm, but, as we will see, these were
relatively modest compared with what came next.
A Massive Experiment
After Katrina, state leaders quickly moved almost all public
schools under the umbrella of the RSD, leaving the higher-performing
ones under the Orleans Parish School Board (OPSB). Gradually, the RSD
turned schools over to charter operators, and the teacher workforce
shifted toward alternatively prepared teachers from Teach for America
and other programs. So new was the system that a new name was
required--longtime education reformer Paul Hill called it the
"portfolio" model.
Researchers often refer to such sudden changes as "natural
experiments" and study them using a technique called
"difference-in-differences." The idea is to first take the
difference between outcomes before and after the policy, in the place
where it was implemented--the treatment group. This first difference is
insufficient, however, because other factors may have affected the
treatment group at the same time. This calls for making the same
before-and-after comparison in a group that is identical, except for
being unaffected by the treatment. Subtracting these two--taking the
difference of the two differences between the treatment and comparison
groups--yields a credible estimate of the policy effect.
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We have carried out two difference-in-differences strategies:
1) Returnees only. We study only those students who returned to New
Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. The advantage of this approach is that
it compares the same students over time. One disadvantage is that it
omits nonreturnees. Also, we can only study returnees over a short
period of time--after 2009, they no longer have measurable outcomes to
study.
2) Different cohorts. We consider the achievement growth of
different cohorts of students before and after the reforms--for example,
students in 3rd grade in 2005 and students in 3rd grade in 2012. The
advantages here are that we can include both returnees and nonreturnees,
and we can use this strategy to study longer-term effects. But the
students are no longer the same.
In both strategies, the New Orleans data set includes all publicly
funded schools in the city, including those governed by the district
(OPSB), since all public schools were influenced by the reforms. The
main comparison group includes other districts in Louisiana that were
affected by Hurricane Katrina, and by Hurricane Rita, which came soon
afterward. This helps account for at least some of the trauma and
disruption caused by the storms, the quality of schools students
attended in other regions while their local schools were closed, and any
changes in the state tests and state education policies that affected
both groups.
Effects on Average Achievement
Figure 1 shows the scores for each cohort, separately for New
Orleans and the matched comparison group. The scores cover grades 3
through 8, are averaged across subjects, and are standardized so that
zero refers to the statewide mean. The first thing to notice is that
before the reforms, students in New Orleans performed far below the
Louisiana average, at about the 30th percentile statewide. Students from
the comparison districts also lagged behind the rest of the state, but
by a lesser amount. The New Orleans students and the comparison group
were moving in parallel before the reforms, however, suggesting that our
matching process produced a comparison group that is more appropriate
than the state as a whole.
The performance of New Orleans students shot upward after the
reforms. In contrast, the comparison group largely continued its prior
trajectory. Between 2005 and 2012, the performance gap between New
Orleans and the comparison group closed and eventually reversed,
indicating a positive effect of the reforms of about 0.4 standard
deviations, enough to improve a typical student's performance by 15
percentile points.
The estimates we obtain when we focus just on returnees are smaller
and often not statistically significant, although the discrepancies are
predictable: first, the returnees were probably more negatively affected
by trauma and disruption; second, creating a new school system from
scratch takes time, so we would expect any effects to be larger in later
years; and third, the effects of the reforms seem more positive in early
elementary grades, and the returnees were generally in middle school
when they returned. Even so, the combination of analyses suggests
effects of at least 0.2 standard deviations, or enough to improve a
typical student's performance by 8 percentage points.
But there is still the possibility that what appear to be reform
effects are actually the result of other factors.
Addressing Additional Concerns
The goal of any analysis like this is to rule out explanations for
the changes in outcomes other than the reforms themselves. Our main
comparisons deal with many potential problems, such as changes in state
tests and policies. Here we consider in more depth four specific factors
that could bias the estimated effects on achievement: population change,
interim school effects, hurricane-related trauma and disruption, and
test-based accountability distortions.
Population change. Hurricane Katrina forced almost everyone to
leave the city. Some returned and some did not. The most heavily flooded
neighborhoods were (not coincidentally) those where family incomes were
lowest, and people in these neighborhoods returned at much lower rates
than people who lived in other parts of the city. Given the strong
correlation between poverty and student outcomes, this could mean that
higher test scores shown in Figure 1 are driven not by the reforms but
by schools serving more-advantaged students.
Observers have pointed out that the share of the student population
eligible for free or reduced-price lunch (FRL) actually increased
slightly in New Orleans after the storm. But there are many reasons not
to trust FRL data. For example, they reflect crude yes/no measures and
are unlikely to capture extreme poverty of the sort common in New
Orleans. Also, what really matters here is not whether poverty increased
in New Orleans, but whether poverty increased more than in the
comparison group. Therefore, in addition, we gathered data from the U.S.
Census, which measures changes in income and the percentages of the
population with various levels of education. We also carried out the
difference-in-differences analysis in these demographic measures to
understand the changes in New Orleans relative to the matched comparison
group of hurricane-affected districts, and then simulated the effect of
changes in family background characteristics on test scores using data
from the federal Early Childhood Longitudinal Study.
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We also examined pre-Katrina characteristics to see whether the
returnees were different from nonreturnees and found that returnees did
have slightly higher scores. In fact, we come to the same conclusion in
both analyses: the expected increase in student outcomes after the
hurricanes due to population change is no more than 0.02 to 0.06
standard deviations, or about 10 percent of the
difference-in-differences estimates in Figure 1.
Interim school effects. Some of the changes in student learning may
reflect neither the prestorm nor poststorm quality of New Orleans
schools, but the performance of schools that students briefly attended
outside the city after the evacuation. Other research on these students
by Dartmouth economist Bruce Sacerdote suggests that New Orleans
evacuees experienced larger improvements in school quality than evacuees
from other districts.
Trauma and disruption. Any benefit of having good interim schools
might be offset by the trauma and disruption of the storm itself and its
aftermath. The majority of New Orleans returnees probably knew someone
among the nearly 2,000 people who died in the Katrina aftermath. Also,
almost all students experienced significant disruption, moving to
unfamiliar neighborhoods and schools for extended periods. Reports of
post-traumatic stress disorder remain common.
It is difficult to isolate trauma and interim school effects, but
we can estimate the combination of the two. A study by the RAND
Corporation of students from Louisiana districts affected by the
hurricane suggests that these two factors had a short-term net negative
effect on evacuees' performance of 0.03 to 0.06 standard
deviations. Our analysis suggests that the negative influence is even
larger for New Orleans students, most likely because of the more
extensive destruction in the city compared with most other areas along
the state's coast. Thus, at least in the years just after the
reforms, the factors pushing student outcomes down were at least as
large as the population changes pushing them up.
Test-based accountability distortions. One key part of the New
Orleans reforms was the idea that the state would shut down schools
within three to five years if they did not generate a high enough School
Performance Score, a measure based on test scores and graduation rates.
Prior research suggests that such intensive test-based accountability
can lead to behaviors, such as teaching to the test, that increase
scores without improvements in underlying learning or through reduced
learning in nontested subjects.
To address this problem, we estimate effects separately by subject,
recognizing that the stakes attached to math and language scores were
roughly double the stakes for science and social studies scores during
the period under analysis. Also, the state's social promotion
policy raises the stakes for students in grades 4 and 8. We find no
evidence that the size of effects varied systematically with the stakes
attached to the subjects or grades. However, it is hard to rule out
other potential test-based accountability distortions with our data.
As further evidence, we considered descriptive information on
nontest outcomes. State government reports indicate that, relative to
the state as a whole, the New Orleans high school graduation rate and
college entry rate (among high school graduates) rose 10 and 14
percentage points, respectively.
So, in theory, there are many challenges to estimating the effects
of the New Orleans package of school reforms. The combined effect of
these alternative factors on long-term achievement gains appears small,
however, especially when compared with our initial estimate of the
reform effects.
There is a clear pattern across these methods. The estimates are
consistently within the same range, and even the lower end of that range
suggests large positive effects.
Equity of Outcomes
Public schools exist to ensure that all children have an
opportunity to succeed in life. Thus we consider not only the average
effects of the reform package, but also whether the most-disadvantaged
students benefited.
We first define equity in terms of how New Orleans, as an urban
district, performed relative to districts serving more-advantaged
students. Both before and after the reforms, at least 80 percent of New
Orleans students were minority or eligible for FRL. It is therefore
noteworthy that the reforms brought the city's students near to the
state average on a wide range of academic outcomes (see Figure 1).
It is also important to consider the distribution of effects within
the city, and here the results are more mixed. All major subgroups of
students--African American, low-income, special education, and English
Language Learners (ELL)--were at least as well-off after the reforms, in
terms of achievement. Critics of charter schools express concern about
possible increases in racial isolation (some would say
"segregation"). Among all of the various subgroups we
considered, only Hispanic students seem to have experienced increases in
isolation.
There have also been concerns about schools unfairly targeting
low-income and African American students in disciplinary decisions.
While we have not yet studied whether any student groups have been
specifically targeted, we can say that the number of suspensions and
expulsions has dropped since the reforms, for African American students
and others alike.
There are a few less-positive signs, however. In our analysis of
what families look for when choosing schools, we found that the
lowest-income families place less weight on the School Performance Score
than other families. Their circumstances may lead them to focus more on
practical considerations such as distance to school and extended hours
(to avoid extra child-care costs). Similarly, in our analysis of student
mobility, we see that low-scoring students are less likely than
high-scoring students to migrate toward schools with high scores.
Finally, up until a few years ago, principals reported cherry-picking
students by, for example, counseling out students deemed poor fits and
holding invitation-only events to attract certain students.
Given the large improvements in average outcomes in a district that
is almost entirely low-income and minority, and the mixed evidence on
other equity indicators, it would be hard to say the outcomes from the
New Orleans reforms are inequitable relative to what came before them.
That said, they were highly inequitable to start with, and there is
clearly room for improvement.
What Really Changed?
To help improve the schools going forward, it is important to know
how school practices and other intermediate outcomes changed. In a
series of 15 ongoing studies, my collaborators at ERA-New Orleans and I
have examined four main components of the reforms: choice and
competition, teachers and leaders, charters and CMOs, and test-based
accountability.
Some of the reform effect may be driven by parental choice and
competition. The supply of schools in New Orleans appears highly
differentiated. Some schools specialize in math and science, others in
the arts. Some schools offer language immersion programs, while other
schools have fairly traditional curricula. Some schools have selective
admissions, while others are open enrollment or seek diverse student
bodies. We also find that New Orleans families diverge in their
schooling preferences, so having this degree of differentiation in
schooling options is likely to help match what families want with what
schools offer (see "The New Orleans OneApp," features, and
"Many Options in New Orleans Choice System," research, Fall
2015).
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It is still unclear, however, whether these changes in the market
have contributed to the improvements in student outcomes. Even
supporters of the reform efforts sometimes bristle when I use the word
"market" and "competition" to describe the new
system. Instead, they point to two other parts of the reform package:
the authority of the state to close schools and the authority schools
have over their teaching staffs.
Sixteen New Orleans schools have been completely closed and another
30 have been taken over in some fashion by either the RSD or OPSB--a
large number in a city that has only about 90 public schools in total.
Consistent with written state policies, we find that the School
Performance Score is the strongest measurable driver of closure and
renewal decisions. Moreover, in finding CMOs to open new schools and
take over old ones, the RSD has preferred those with a track record of
academic success.
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School leaders in New Orleans talk frequently about how critical
flexibility in personnel management is to their overall school success.
Free of state and local mandates and constraints from union contracts,
leaders reopening schools after the storm could hire anyone they wanted,
including uncertified teachers, and dismiss teachers relatively easily.
As CMOs took over, more of the teacher workforce came from alternative
preparation programs such as Teach for America and The New Teacher
Project. Consistent with some other studies, analyses commissioned by
the state suggest that graduates of these programs contribute more to
student achievement than graduates of traditional preparation programs.
The combination of policies had two types of effects on the teacher
workforce. First, the percentages of teachers with regular certification
and with 20 or more years of experience dropped by about 20 points each.
Also, due to both the short-term commitments of some alternatively
certified teachers and school autonomy over personnel, the teacher
turnover rate nearly doubled. The fact that such large improvements in
student learning could be achieved with these common metrics going in
the "wrong direction" reinforces a common finding in education
research: teacher credentials and turnover are not always good
barometers of effectiveness.
Finally, we turn to a topic that is not typically thought of as
part of the reform package but may be an essential component: costs and
resources. Our analysis suggests that from 2004-05 to 2011-12, the same
years covered by our achievement analysis, total public schooling
expenditures per student increased by $1,000 in New Orleans relative to
other districts in the state. Some of the increase probably reflects
one-time start-up costs of new schools, and we are working to understand
what share falls in that category. Regardless, there is wide agreement
that the reforms did not come cheap.
None of this really tells us exactly which of the factors drove the
improvements in student outcomes--no doubt they are interconnected--but
it does provide some indication of how schools and families responded to
the policy shift.
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Implications for New Orleans
These findings have important implications for the New Orleans
public schools, the many other urban districts pursuing the portfolio
approach, and for the state and federal policies--especially test-based
and market-based accountability --from which the New Orleans reforms
emerged.
For New Orleans, the news on average student outcomes is quite
positive by just about any measure. The reforms seem to have moved the
average student up by 0.2 to 0.4 standard deviations and boosted rates
of high school graduation and college entry. We are not aware of any
other districts that have made such large improvements in such a short
time.
The effects are also large compared with other completely different
strategies for school improvement, such as class-size reduction and
intensive preschool. This seems true even after we account for the
higher costs. While it might seem hard to compare such different
strategies, the heart of the larger school-reform debate is between
systemic reforms like the portfolio model and resource-oriented
strategies.
With the possible exception of distortions from test-based
accountability, which are harder to identify, the reforms managed to
avoid most of the side effects that many feared. But our findings also
suggest areas of potential improvement. While the reforms have been
successful on some dimensions of equity, it seems necessary to do more
to ensure that all groups within the city benefit. All types of public
school systems struggle with providing equitable access to quality
schools, and the New Orleans system is no exception.
Implications for the Nation
Unfortunately, the effects of even the most successful programs are
often not replicated when tried elsewhere, and there are good reasons to
think the conditions were especially ripe for success in New Orleans:
There was nowhere to go but up. Pre-Katrina, the New Orleans public
school system was highly dysfunctional, and student test scores made it
the second-lowest-ranked district in the second-lowest-ranked state in
the country.
New Orleans is an attractive city for young educators. The national
response to the hurricane aftermath was heartening, and for many young
people, contributing to the rebuilding effort became a calling. Later,
as the reform effort took hold, New Orleans also became the
nation's epicenter of school reform, an ideal place for aspiring
reform-minded educators. Because the city is smaller than many urban
districts, school leaders could be very selective in choosing from the
pool of educators who wanted to come and work there.
The effects might also be smaller, at least in the short run, if
the reforms were adopted on a statewide basis, because the reform is
dependent on a specific supply of teachers. It seems difficult enough
attracting effective teachers and leaders to work long hours at modest
salaries in New Orleans; doing it throughout Louisiana is unrealistic
without a major change in the educator labor market. Nonetheless, it
would be a mistake to dismiss the relevance of the New Orleans
experience for others. It is relevant precisely because it is so
unusual. The city's reforms force us to question basic assumptions
about what K-12 publicly funded education can and should look like.
There is more to the debate than we can cover here, including
fundamental philosophical issues about whose objectives and values
should count in making schooling decisions. But there is also wide
agreement that the academic outcomes considered here are important, so
learning how much the reforms contribute to changes in academic measures
should also be a key part of the conversation. Better understanding of
all the elements of the reforms is something we owe to the city, its
children, and everyone who suffered and perished in this terrible
tragedy.
by DOUGLAS N. HARRIS
Douglas N. Harris is professor of economics at Tulane University
and founder and director of the Education Research Alliance for New
Orleans. The research cited here is coauthored with others on the
ERA-New Orleans research staff (Paula Arce-Trigatti, Nathan Barrett,
Lindsay Bell Weixler, Christian Buerger, Matthew Larsen, Jane Arnold
Tincove, Whitney Ruble, Robert Santillano, and Jon Valant) and members
of the ERA-New Orleans National Research Team (Huriya Jabbar, Jennifer
Jennings, Spiro Maroulis, Katharine Strunk, Patrick Wolf, and Ron
Zimmer). All errors are the author's.