Tracking is a district problem: schools of choice are actually less likely to use ability tracking.
Wolf, Patrick J.
On the Same Track: How Schools Can Join the Twenty-First-Century
Struggle Against Resegregation
by Carol Corbett Burris
Beacon Press, 2014, $24.95; 197 pages.
Carol Corbett Burris hates ability tracking. She also hates
parental school choice. A lot. One goal of this book is to convince the
reader that the latter increases the former: that parental school-choice
programs cause or represent ability tracking. On that count, the book
does not succeed.
Ability tracking is the practice of assigning students within a
given school to course streams of differing levels of challenge
depending on each student's perceived intellectual capacity.
Tracking is common, especially in traditional public schools. Burris
combines reviews of academic studies, as well as personal anecdotes from
her own experience as an educator, to argue that ability tracking has a
negative effect on the educational achievement of "low track"
students while also undermining social cohesion. Although the empirical
research base on the effects of tracking is decidedly mixed, I am
willing to grant Burris the point that ability tracking, as typically
practiced in district schools, probably is bad for lower-ability
students.
Burris devotes a chapter in the book to her own experience of
helping to de-track a school district in Rockville Centre in Long
Island, New York. One successful case does not prove that a policy of
de-tracking will work in general. Moreover, her list of 10 key
requirements for de-tracking at the end of the chapter suggests that the
case occurred in a reform "hot house" ideally situated to be
successful. The history of education policy is rife with cases of
hot-house reforms that produced positive results that could not be
replicated elsewhere. Burris herself admits that "Rockville Centre
is one of the few examples of a successfully de-tracked school
system."
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Still, her case study in de-tracking at Rockville Centre provides a
sort of "proof of concept." Other chapters discuss less
successful case studies in de-tracking, including some that returned to
ability tracking after having been de-tracked. Burris argues that
attitudes about IQ and learning, persisting from the Progressive Era,
tend to combine with political considerations to slow or undermine
efforts at de-tracking. School districts are, after all, political
organizations.
In fact, much of Burris's book can be understood as a damning
indictment of an education system that is rife with educator and
parental attitudes of entitlement, racism, and low expectations for
disadvantaged students, which manifest themselves in the entrenched
nature of ability tracking. She needs to change all of that if ability
tracking is to be assigned to the trash heap of history. I wish her well
in her quest.
The even more difficult assignment for Burris, however, is to
convince the reader that parental school choice causes or at least
increases ability tracking. Part of the problem with her argument is
that the practice of ability tracking preceded the development of
parental school choice programs by more than 50 years. Burris would have
us believe that the baby birthed the mother.
Ability tracking was a reform of the Progressive Era of the early
20th century, intended to make public schools more scientific in their
development of young minds. The assessment of intelligence quotient (IQ)
was popular at the time, and the thinking was that a student's IQ
was both fixed and largely determinative of how much a child could
learn. (Both of those ideas have been debunked by modern science, at
least in their most extreme expressions.) Smart kids would have their
learning diminished by being educated with slower learners, and vice
versa, the Progressives thought. It is better for everyone if students
are sorted into like groups based on ability, as measured by IQ, and
have their education delivered within these rigid tracks, they argued.
Ability tracking arose in part as a response to the challenges
posed by another Progressive Era education reform: the consolidated
public school. Individual schools tended to be small, tightly
integrated, communal organizations prior to the 20th century--the famed
little red school-houses. Progressives were convinced that public
education would be delivered more effectively and efficiently if it were
done on a grand scale, like the automobile industry. They launched a
sustained and unfortunately successful effort at merging small schools
into large ones, and independent school districts into large,
consolidated districts. The total number of school districts in the U.S.
dropped from more than 100,000 around the turn of the 20th century to
less than 15,000 by the turn of the 21st century, even as the population
of school-age children increased during that period.
The public education system was transformed by the Progressives
into a small set of large, industrial-type organizations governed by
elected politicians. The educators in those organizations faced a
problem. These new, large schools brought through the school doors a
heterogeneous mix of students with widely varying levels of educational
preparation and ability. The Progressives' solution to the problem
of scale that they had created was ability tracking at the school level
and parental school choice through "exam schools" at the
district level. As social scientist George Ansalone reported in 2003,
"The practice of tracking is entrenched in the philosophy of
American education and is practiced in 60 percent of all primary and 80
percent of all secondary [public] schools in the United States."
Ability tracking simply is what district schools do.
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Exam schools in particular are undeniably a mechanism of ability
tracking used in school districts, and they appropriately evoke
Burris's ire. Having established that the form of parental school
choice offered within school districts is a harmful way of ability
tracking, Burris uses that example to tarnish parental school choice in
its other forms of public charter schooling and private school vouchers
as well. It is here that Burris's indictment of school choice falls
apart.
There is a compelling research literature on ability tracking and
public charter schools and private schools. The seminal works on the
question include Catholic Schools and the Common Good, by Anthony Bryk
and his colleagues (1993); Choosing Equality, by Joseph Viteritti
(1999); "Politics, Markets, and Equality in Schools," by John
E. Chubb and Terry Moe (1995); and "Getting Beneath the Veil of
Effective Schools," by Will Dobbie and Roland G. Fryer (2013).
These studies show, consistently, that parental schools of choice not
controlled by public school districts 1) are usually prohibited by law
from screening out students based on admission exams, 2) use ability
tracking less frequently than traditional public schools even when,
legally, they can, and 3) may use ability tracking, but when they do, it
is less likely to have a negative effect on the achievement of low-track
students. In fact, there is substantial evidence that escape from the
harmful effects of ability tracking in the district schools is a major
factor driving disadvantaged families to charter schools and private
school choice.
Unfortunately, you won't find any of these seminal books and
articles mentioned in Burris's highly selective review of the
education literature, as their findings completely undermine her claim
that parental school choice increases ability tracking. A broader
understanding of the history of ability tracking and school choice,
grounded in the complete scholarly literature, holds that the
consolidated schools of the Progressive Era begat ability tracking,
which begat worse educational experiences and outcomes for disadvantaged
students, which caused minority and low-income families to flee
traditional public schools for alternative schools of choice that treat
them better.
In sum, I have very good news to pass along to Carol Corbett Burris
and her supporters. We already have an approach to education in the U.S.
that minimizes both the frequency and the harm of student ability
tracking. It's called parental school choice.
As reviewed by Patrick J. Wolf
Patrick J. Wolf is professor of education policy at the University
of Arkansas.