STATEMENT OF RAND PRESIDENT AND CEO, JAMES A. THOMSON
The issue paper on Texas Education and Test Scores that RAND issued
today is already the subject of intense controversy, as we expected. I
want to underscore several points:
- This research was thoroughly reviewed by distinguished external and
internal experts. We stand behind the quality of both this paper and of
our July report on the meaning of national test scores across the
country, which also sparked considerable controversy.
- The timing of the release of both reports was based on the same,
constant RAND standard; we release our work as soon as the research,
review and revision processes are complete. We don't produce findings
for political reasons, we don't distribute them for political reasons
and we don't sit on them for political reasons. This is a scrupulously
nonpartisan institution.
The July study -- Improving Student Achievement: What State NAEP Scores
Tell Us-- also touched on Texas schools and received widespread press
play. Both efforts draw on NAEP scores. The new paper suggests a less
positive picture of Texas education than the earlier effort. But I do
not believe that these efforts are in sharp conflict. Together in fact
they provide a more comprehensive picture of key education issues.
The July report differed in scope (it covered almost all states, not
just Texas), in methodology (it adjusted states' NAEP scores for family
characteristics, such as racial and socioeconomic differences), and most
of all in focus. It sought to explain why student achievement scores
vary so widely across the states even after those demographic
adjustments are made. The team that researched the new Issue Paper on
the other hand focused on Texas and its statewide testing program.
Texas was studied because the state exemplifies a national trend toward
using statewide exams as a basis for high-stakes educational decisions.
From the Texas standpoint, the good news is that the state ranks high in
adjusted student achievement. Our July study correlates this with
specific ways that resources are allocated to high-leverage programs,
such as pre-kindergarten, one of the features of the Texas reform
effort. The bad news is that the statewide testing system in Texas
needs improvement. The Issue Paper team suggests ways this can be done
in Texas and other states.
October 24, 2000
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