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Wikipedia

Eric Hanushek

Eric Alan Hanushek (/ˈhænəʃɛk/;[1] born May 22, 1943) is an economist who has written prolifically on public policy with a special emphasis on the economics of education. Since 2000, he has been a Paul and Jean Hanna Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution,[2][3][4] an American public policy think tank located at Stanford University in California. He was awarded the Yidan Prize for Education Research in 2021.

Eric A. Hanushek
Eric Hanushek speaking in 2012
Born (1943-05-22) May 22, 1943 (age 79)
NationalityAmerican
InstitutionStanford University
University of Rochester
Yale University
FieldEducation economics
Alma materMassachusetts Institute of Technology
United States Air Force Academy
AwardsYidan Prize for Education Research, 2021
Information at IDEAS / RePEc

Hanushek advocates using economic analysis to improve student performance. He has authored numerous, highly cited[5] articles on the effects of class size reduction, high-stakes accountability, teacher effectiveness, and other education related topics. In a 1971 paper he introduced the concept of evaluating teacher effectiveness on the basis of student learning gains.[6] This idea is the basis of value-added assessments of teacher quality. In his most recent book, The Knowledge Capital of Nations, Hanushek concludes that the quality of education is causally related to economic growth. [7]

Hanushek is a frequent contributor to the opinion pages of the Wall Street Journal and also appears frequently in court cases as a paid expert witness testifying for the state in lawsuits brought by plaintiffs attempting to equalize disparities in funding of school districts.[8]

Activities, appointments, and awards

Hanushek received a Bachelor of Science degree from the United States Air Force Academy in 1965 and a PhD in economics from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1968. He served in the U.S. Air Force from 1961 to 1974. Hanushek held teaching positions at the U.S. Air Force Academy (1968–73) and at Yale University (1975–78) and was named professor of economics and public policy at the University of Rochester from 1978 to 2000.

Hanushek is a member of the Hoover Institution's Koret Task Force on K-12 Education, whose members, including Caroline M. Hoxby and Paul E. Peterson, support school accountability, teacher incentives, and charter schools and vouchers. Hanushek was a presidential appointee to the Board of Directors of the National Board for Education Sciences that approves the research priorities of the U.S. Department of Education's Institute of Education Sciences and was the Board chair from 2008 to 2010. From 2011 to 2013, he served on the Equity and Excellence Commission of the U.S. Department of Education. He is a research professor at the Ifo Institute for Economic Research (University of Munich) and is the area coordinator for Economics of Education, CESifo Research Network. He is also a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research and a research fellow of the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA). In the U.S. federal government, Hanushek has served as deputy director of the Congressional Budget Office, senior staff economist at the Council of Economic Advisers, and senior economist for the Cost of Living Council. At the state level, he has been appointed to state education advisory commissions by the governor of California and of Texas.

Hanushek was the recipient of an award for scholarship from the Thomas B. Fordham Institute (a think tank) in 2004.

Personal life

Hanushek is married to Margaret (Macke) Raymond, director of the Center for Research on Education Outcomes (CREDO) at Stanford University. CREDO has issued numerous studies of the performance of charter schools in the United States.

As expert witness

Since the early 1970s, when plaintiffs have filed lawsuits seeking to overthrow school funding based on local property taxes as inequitable, Hanushek has been called to testify as an expert witness in defense of the state. He testifies that the problem with schools is not so much lack of funds as inefficiency and asserts that increasing (or seeking to equalize) appropriations can be wasteful, since his analyses show that more funding produces inconsistent outcomes.[9] Instead of seeking to equalize funding among districts, Hanushek recommends introducing value-added testing to identify and remove underperforming teachers, greater accountability, and vouchers and charter schools to introduce market-based parental choice. He labels those who oppose these measures as wanting to protect special interests and sacred cows and accuses them of wanting to maintain the status quo. In particular, Hanushek identifies teachers' unions among the entrenched or special interests that oppose the measures he recommends.[10] The 20 school funding trials at which Hanushek has testified over the years include Serrano v. Priest (1973) in California, Somerset County Board of Education v Hornbeck in Maryland (1980), and Abbott v. Burke (1987) in New Jersey. His amicus brief was cited in the 2009 five-to-four U.S. Supreme Court decision of Horne v. Flores. Citing Hanushek and Lindseth in a majority opinion written by Justice Samuel Alito, the court held that in evaluating the actions of the state, attention should focus on student outcomes rather than on inequalities of spending and other inputs to schools.

In 2011 Hanushek was the central expert witness for the defense in the highly publicized case of Lobato vs. State of Colorado, named for Taylor Lobato, who in 2005 was a middle-school student when her parents filed a suit that claimed her San Luis Valley school district was underfunded compared to wealthier districts. In that case, Denver District Judge Sheila Rappaport issued a 189-page decision rejecting the state's arguments, writing that: "Dr. Hanushek’s analysis that there is not much relationship in Colorado between spending and achievement contradicts testimony and documentary evidence from dozens of well-respected educators in the State, defies logic, and is statistically flawed."[11] In 2013, the Colorado Supreme Court reversed Judge Rappaport's opinion and overturned the lower court's opinion in its entirety.

For his part, Hanushek maintains that state and federal court decisions "of the type we describe" (namely, rejecting funding equity appeals) may be justified because they "may persuade the legislature to adopt the more ‘disruptive’ reforms that may actually lead to improvements in student achievement."[12]

Research

Hanushek's Ph.D. thesis introduced a model that he termed an "educational production function" into the analysis of education issues.[13] This model postulated a clear distinction between inputs to education – including family, neighborhood, and peer factors – and outcomes of education – typically measured by student achievement, continuation in school, or ultimately income and employment.[14] According to Hanushek, when placed in the common value-added form, his model identifies the impact of added resources, given prior achievement and other non-school factors.

The relationship between resources and class size and academic performance

His 1986 paper, "The Economics of Schooling",[15] reported finding an inconsistent relationship between school resources and student outcomes. It provoked numerous responses.[16] For this reason he is associated, especially by his detractors, with the slogan "money doesn't matter". One critic, Larry Hedges, used meta-analysis of Hanushek's own figures to contend that $100 spent per pupil (1989 dollars) would in fact raise student achievement by one-fifth of a standard deviation.[17] Between 1990 and 2010, however, spending per pupil adjusted for inflation rose by $3500, while reading scores of 17-year-olds actually fell.[18] Hanushek responded to critics in "Money might matter somewhere."[19] Hanushek maintains that how money is spent is more important than how much money is spent, now a commonly accepted interpretation of the data. He suggests that money allocated ought to be spent implementing the policies with proven efficacy, such as replacing teachers who fail to raise test scores and closing schools which persistently fail to produce reasonable student achievement. Citing with approval Frederick M. Hess of the American Enterprise Institute, he argues that court decisions over funding adequacy, may create a policy ‘window’ in which "judicial cover is provided for legislative activities and a variety of remedies are put forward. These ‘windows’ have been mainly used to push through higher funding, but there is no reason that court decisions could not also open a ‘window’ during which other reforms, such as those discussed in this book, might also be enacted."[20]

Hanushek's other claim, that class size has no consistent effect on educational performance,[21] is vehemently disputed by Alan Krueger,[22] among others. The debate is summed up in Lawrence Mishel and Richard Rothstein (eds.) The class size debate (Washington, DC: Economic Policy Institute, 2002). See also the peer-reviewed assessment of the evidence in Ronald G. Ehrenberg, Dominic J. Brewer, Adam Gamoran, and J. Douglas Willms, "Class size and student achievement." Psychological Science in the Public Interest 2, no. 1 (May 2001) 1–30

Hanushek explains his position this way:

The discussion whether school resources are systematically related to school quality and to school achievement has tended toward a battle of slogans "Money matters" or "Money doesn’t matter." ... It is tautological to say that we will get good performance if we spend the money wisely. Today the existing knowledge base does not ensure that any added funds will, on average, be spent wisely. That is true even if some schools may spend their funds wisely.[23][24]

As an alternative to increasing funding for public schools as a way to boost student performance, Hanushek recommends holding schools accountable and assessing teacher effectiveness.

Effect of teacher and administrator quality on learning gains

Hanushek concludes that teacher quality is by far the most important factor in raising student achievement and, moreover, that teacher quality is not closely related to such factors as teacher salaries, educational background, or experience. In considering teacher policies, test scores should be one metric by which the quality of teachers should be measured, Hanushek contends.[25]

In contrast to James Coleman, who in the 1960s had suggested that schools and teachers had little effect on student performance,[26] Hanushek introduced the idea of judging teacher effectiveness based on the learning gains of students. Hanushek's 1992 study of inner-city children showed that disadvantaged pupils taught by good teachers gained one-and one-half years of learning, as opposed to only six months when taught by poor teachers – that is, a difference of a full school year.[27] This finding he maintained had highly significant policy implications.[28]

Hanushek's approach underlies the development of "value-added assessment" methods of teacher effectiveness, which uses statistical analysis of student achievement information (as measured by pupil scores) to evaluate teacher performance. When applied in teacher personnel decisions, value added assessment has been highly controversial. In 2010, the value added rankings for more than 6,000 teachers were published in the Los Angeles Times, resulting in complaints by teachers and their unions that they were being subjected to public shaming.[29] The New York Times also subsequently published such measures for their local teachers. Nonetheless, a significant number of states now require that teacher evaluations include consideration of student achievement and in some cases require the use of value added measures.[30]

In a series of papers, Hanushek argued that replacing the least effective 5–8 percent of teachers with an average teacher could lead to dramatic gains in achievement for U.S. students.[31] By his calculations, average U.S. PISA scores would increase to the level of Canada, or maybe even Finland, and that higher U.S. growth would lead to substantial economic gains. These arguments have led to a continuing and contentious debate. One side has argued that this analysis supports arguments for improving teacher evaluations and for eliminating teacher tenure. The other side has argued that it is not possible to fire yourself to the top.

Hanushek's analyses of teacher value-added and of the impact of teacher effectiveness on economic outcomes of students were central to the California court case of Vergara v. California, a case in which he subsequently testified for the plaintiffs. That court case challenged the constitutionality of the teacher tenure and the teacher dismissal statutes in California. In June 2014 Judge Ralph M. Treu issued his ruling in the case, finding that the statutes in question were unconstitutional.[32] This ruling was subsequently appealed by the California Teachers Association and by Governor Jerry Brown.[33] A follow-on suit was filed in New York State.[34]

Princeton University economist Jesse M. Rothstein has described the use of value-added measurement for evaluating teacher performance, recommended by Hanushek as early as 1971, as conceptually deeply flawed, since value-added scores assume that students are randomly assigned to teachers, whereas in the real world it is almost never the case for students to be randomly assigned to teachers or schools. "Non-random assignment of students to teachers can bias value-added estimates of teachers’ causal effects," Rothstein writes.[35] Daniel F. McCaffrey and Thomas Kane of the Measures of Effective Teaching Project of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation had published studies supportive of Hanushek's contentions,[36] as have Raj Chetty (William Henry Bloomberg Professor of Economics at Harvard) et al.[37]

In addition to measuring teachers, Hanushek has also applied his outcome-based approach to measuring the effectiveness of school principals, whom he states also greatly impact student achievement – through their role in selecting and retaining good teachers. This research appeared as working paper "Estimating the effects of leaders on public sector productivity. The case of school principals", published by the National Bureau of Economic Research (2012). The same authors also issued a more general article, "School Leaders Matter", explaining their conclusions in the Hoover Institute magazine Education Next 13: 1 (Winter 2013). In a review, Margaret Terry Orr agreed that principals can have positive effects but she questioned whether value added methods could ever adequately measure their performance, faulting the authors for using "sloppy terminology" and ignoring "a large body of research."[38]

Effects of peers and school racial composition

Together with co-authors John Kain and Steven Rivkin, Hanushek has studied the influence of peer ability on achievement in elementary classrooms in Texas, concluding that the achievement level of peers exerts a positive influence whose impact is roughly constant across the achievement distribution.[39] In contrast, the variance in achievement appears to have no systematic influence, leading them to conclude that ability grouping per se has no separate impact.

Hanushek et al. also found that achievement levels of black students (but not of white or Hispanic students) appeared to be systematically lowered in the presence of large concentrations of other black students in their school.[40] They found this effect to be especially pronounced among the highest-achieving black students.[41] These results, in their view, underscore the importance of school integration.

Economic impact of education

 
Average annual growth rate in real GDP per capita vs. scores on standardized tests of student achievement 1960-2000 adjusted for 1960 GDP per capita. [From Hanushek and Woessmann (2015, Table 1A.1, similar to their Figure 1.1).]

Hanushek contends that in both individuals and nations, cognitive skills are causally related to economic outcomes such that variations in growth rates across countries can be largely explained by consideration of the role of cognitive skills.[42][43] Previous studies have measured human capital through years of schooling attained by the labor force,[44] Hanushek, however, believes that cognitive skills as measured by international test scores, give a more accurate picture in industrialized and developing countries alike.[45]

Breton has challenged the validity of Hanushek's claim that cognitive skills, as measured by international test scores, are a more accurate indicator of a nation's capabilities than years of schooling.[46] He argues that the statistical analysis that Hanushek and Woessmann use to support this claim is invalid because their model is mis-specified.

Differences in economic growth among Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries closely reflect differences in mathematics and science achievement.[47] Differences in achievement also appear to explain completely the slow growth of Latin America.[48]

At the individual level, differences in cognitive skills across countries receive varying rewards in the labor market. The U.S. appears to reward skills the most, while Poland, Sweden, and the Czech Republic provide the least return among selected countries.[49]

Linking teacher value-added measurement with research on the economic impact of differences in achievement both for individual earnings and for economic growth, Hanushek estimates that the impact of differences in teacher quality is significant, and the least effective teachers in U.S. schools have an especially large impact. He estimates that replacing the least effective 5–8 percent of teachers with an average teacher would increase the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by 75 to 110 trillion dollars in present value.[50] He discussed the impact of replacing low performing (bottom 5%) teachers with average teachers in the movie Waiting for "Superman".

Accountability

Hanushek forcefully advocates instituting state and federal accountability systems to improve student achievement,[51] even while acknowledging that existing accountability systems have also been shown to introduce some unwanted outcomes.[52]

In 2011, a United States National Research Council panel issued a report that concluded that empirical results do not support the use of such test-based accountability policies such as the No Child Left Behind Act and high school exit exams. The report concluded that such incentives, which now have been in place for many years, at best have succeeded in raising scores only minutely in the earliest grades and then only in math. The panel also reported that high school exit exams serve only to increase the dropout rate and have no effect on scores.[53] Hanushek responded in the pages of Education Next (published by the Hoover Institution), accusing the panel of "bias" and calling its evidence of poor or non-existent educational improvement "weak".[54] Since then arguments about test-based incentives and school exit exams has intensified.[55] The re-authorization of the No Child Left Behind Act and plans for expansion of high school exit examinations now hinge on the outcome of these debates.

Institutional design

The operations of schools within are shaped and affected by the structure of each country's schooling, making it difficult to assess the significance of the educational environment. Together with Ludger Woessmann of the University of Munich and other co-authors, Hanushek has developed comparative data-based approaches for identifying the impact of differing educational systems.[56]

Ability tracking and local control

Hanushek is on record as opposing early ability tracking on the grounds that research shows that early tracking increases educational inequality and can reduce average performance. Countries that separate students into different tracks early tend to increase the variation in student achievement.[57]

Countries also differ in how much local decision making they permit in their schools. Using a method of their own devising, Hanushek, Woessmann, and Susanne Link used international assessment data from the Programme for International Student Assessment, or PISA, to compare changes in student achievement within individual countries to changes in local autonomy over various educational decisions.[58] They concluded that in developed countries, local decision making impacts positively on student performance. This was also more true where countries had external examinations for students. They caution, however, that it might not be valid to generalize such findings from developed countries to developing countries. In less developed countries, particularly where there was no monitoring of schools through external examinations, local decision making was harmful.

Hanushek also looked at the effects of vocational education versus general education. Some analyses suggest that emphasis of specific skills through vocational schooling can result in slower economic growth,[59] since workers with very specific training, might be able to find work more easily when young but may be disadvantaged later when new technologies make their skills obsolete. Hanushek, Guido Schwerdt, Woessmann, and Lei Zhang compared the life-cycle employment and earnings patterns of those with vocational and general education across countries and found that workers in the most vocation-intensive countries ("apprenticeship countries") did suffer later in their careers and tended to leave the labor force noticeably earlier than workers with general training.[60]

Education in developing countries

Development agencies such as the World Bank and UNESCO have traditionally emphasized expanding access through such initiatives as Education for All and the Millennium Development Goals . Hanushek and Woessmann, however, caution that merely improving access can do little, unless students' cognitive skills are raised, which they say is not happening in many developing countries.[61] They also linked poor quality schools to high dropout rates.[62]

Hanushek's work for the World Bank showed that in developing countries, as in the U.S., policies intended to improve educational resources have not been consistently productive, even though in developing countries they have noticeably lower levels of inputs.[63] In the poorest areas of Brazil, for example, Hanushek and Ralph Harbison contended that large differences among schools and teachers were not systematically related to teacher education, teacher experience, and most other measures of general resources of schools.[64] Hanushek has advocated targeted policies, such as providing text books, which can lead to more efficient schooling by cutting down on grade repetition.[65]

The Texas Schools Project

As chairman of the Executive Committee for the Texas Schools Project at the University of Texas at Dallas (UTD), Hanushek worked with John F. Kain to develop the university's Texas Schools Project.[66] This project used administrative data from schools to compile databases to permit the analysis of the effects of teacher labor markets[67] and the impacts of special education,[68] student mobility, school choice,[69] and charter schools.[70] The Texas Schools Project was the model for similar administrative databases such as found in Florida, North Carolina, and New York.

Publications

  • Hanushek's 2013 book, Endangering Prosperity: A Global View of the American School,[71] written with Hoover Institute colleague Paul E. Peterson and Ludger Woessmann of the University of Munich, has a foreword by former President of Harvard, Lawrence Summers. It makes the case that poor or average scores on the international Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) test will cause the US to lose its economic pre-eminence over other nations. Worse, "America's failure to educate is affecting its national security", according to a 2012 task force co-chaired by former New York City school chancellor Joel Klein and former US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.[72] Moreover, if the US educational achievement were to match that of Canada, their model suggests that over the next 80 years, the average annual income of every worker in the United States "would be 20 percent higher, all other things being equal. Discounted to the present, the gains from a faster-growing economy over the lifetime of someone born today would amount to five times our current GDP."[73]
  • In 2012, he authored an article entitled 'Education Quality and Economic Growth' in The 4% Solution: Unleashing the Economic Growth America Needs, published by the George W. Bush Presidential Center.
  • Hanushek's 2009 book with Alfred Lindseth, Schoolhouses, Courthouses, and Statehouses: Solving the Funding-Achievement Puzzle in America's Public Schools (Princeton University Press), makes the case that increasing money for public schools produces inconsistent results and advocates performance-based funding to improve school outcomes.

Other books Hanushek has written or edited include:

  • Courting Failure: How School Finance Lawsuits Exploit Judges' Good Intentions And Harm Our Children (Education Next Books) (Hoover Institution Press, 2006);
  • Handbook of the Economics of Education (Handbooks in Economics), a four-volume series, which Hanushek edited with Stephen J. Machin, Finis Welch, and Ludger Woessmann (North Holland Press, 2006, 2010, and 2011);
  • The Economics of Schooling and School Quality (International Library of Critical Writings in Economics) (Edward Elgar, 2003);
  • Improving America’s Schools: The Role of Incentives (National National Academies Press, 1996), co-edited with Dale W. Jorgenson;
  • Making Schools Work: Improving Performance and Controlling Costs (Brookings Institution Press, 1996);
  • Educational Performance of the Poor: Lessons from Rural Northeast Brazil (A World Bank Publication) (Oxford University Press, USA,1992) co-written with H. Ralph Harbison; and
  • Education and Education and Race: An Analysis of the Educational Production Process (Lexington Books, 1972).

References

  • Eric Hanushek; Paul E. Peterson; Ludger Woessmann (2013). Endangering prosperity: A global view of the American school. Brookings Institution Press. ISBN 978-0-8157-0373-0. OL 31138267M. Wikidata Q56849246..

Notes

  1. ^ "Office Hours: Eric Hanushek Answers Your Questions On Teacher Quality". PolicyEd. Hoover Institution. August 17, 2017. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved September 18, 2020.
  2. ^ The Hoover Institution has been labeled a "conservative institution." See, for example, Lindsay, Leon (June 2, 1983). "Stanford's conservative think tank is under fire". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  3. ^ de Lama, George (March 3, 1993). "With GOP out of power, conservative think tank is a quieter place". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  4. ^ "Think tank's Hoover Tower turns 50". Daily News of Los Angeles. July 19, 1991. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  5. ^ Google scholar for Eric Hanushek
  6. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, "Teacher characteristics and gains in student achievement: Estimation using micro data." American Economic Review 60, no. 2 (May 1971): 280–88. See the history in Elizabeth Green, Building a better teacher: How teaching works (and how to teach it to everyone) (New York: W.W. Norton and Company, 2014).
  7. ^ Hanushek, Eric; Woessmann, Ludger (2015). The Knowledge Capital of Nations: Education and the Economics of Growth. MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-02917-9.
  8. ^ Reporter Kevin Carey, interviewing Hanushek in 2006 stated: "You mentioned school funding lawsuits. You've served as an expert witness in a number of those lawsuits, always working for states defending themselves against charges that their school funding systems unfairly short-change some school districts." To which Hanushek replied: "I have. I've been involved in those cases over a long period of time. I have always testified on the defense side [i.e., against funding equity]." See Kevin Carey, "Money Matters: An interview with Eric Hanushek" 2013-09-08 at the Wayback Machine, EducationSector at the American Institutes For Research, April 26, 2006. See also: Adrienne Lu, "States sued over education funding", USA Today, February 18, 2014., and Joanne Wasserman, "Judge Wasn't Impressed by Expensive Experts, New York Daily News, March 9, 2001, which mentions that the State of New York State spent $1.4 million of taxpayer money on expert testimony in one such case, of which Hanushek received "$50,000 for his testimony and analysis".
  9. ^ Kate Alexander, "School Finance Trial: Expert: More money might not fix Texas schools", Austin American Statesman, January 1, 2013.
  10. ^ See Eric Hanushek and Alfred Lindseth, Schoolhouses, Courthouses, and Statehouses: Solving the Funding-Achievement Puzzle in America's Public Schools (Princeton University Press, 2009), p. 270 and passim.
  11. ^ Todd Engdahl, "Ruling a clean sweep for Lobato Plaintiffs", EdNews Colorado, December 12, 2011. See also: Tim Hoover, "Denver judge's ruling on school funding levels blisters state's witnesses", Denver Post, December 1, 2011.
  12. ^ Hanushek and Lindseth, Schoolhouses, Courthouses, and Statehouses (2009) p. 287.
  13. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, The Education of Negroes and Whites, PhD. Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1968; see also the expanded version, Eric A. Hanushek, Education and Race: An Analysis of the Educational Production Process (Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath, 1972).
  14. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, "Conceptual and empirical issues in the estimation of educational production functions," Journal of Human Resources 14(3), Summer 1979: 351–88.
  15. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, "The economics of schooling," Journal of Economic Literature, 49(3), September 1986. pp. 1141–177
  16. ^ See, for example, Gary Burtless (ed.), Does money matter? The effect of school resources on student achievement and adult success (Washington, DC: Brookings, 1996).
  17. ^ Larry V. Hedges, Richard D. Laine, and Rob Greenwald, "Does money matter? A meta-analysis of studies of the effects of differential school inputs on student outcomes," Educational Researcher 23(3), April 1994: 5–14. See also: Morton Hunt, "How science takes stock: the story of meta-analysis" 1997, The Russell Sage Foundation, New York
  18. ^ U.S. Department of Education, Digest of Education Statistics 2012, Tables 213 and 140
  19. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, "Money might matter somewhere: A response to Hedges, Laine, and Greenwald," Educational Researcher 23(4), May 1994: 5–8.
  20. ^ Eric Hanushek and Alfred Lindseth, Schoolhouses, Courthouses, and Statehouses: Solving the Funding-Achievement Puzzle in America's Public Schools (Princeton University Press, 2009) pp. 285–86.
  21. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, "The failure of input-based schooling policies", Economic Journal, 113, February 2003, pp. F64–98
  22. ^ Alan B. Krueger, "Understanding the magnitude and effect of class size on student achievement" in The Class Size Debate, edited by Lawrence Mishel and Richard Rothstein (Washington, DC: Economic Policy Institute, 2002): 7–35; Eric A. Hanushek, "Evidence, politics, and the class size debate" in The Class Size Debate, edited by Lawrence Mishel and Richard Rothstein (Washington, DC: Economic Policy Institute, 2002): 37–65.
  23. ^ Eric Hanushek, "School Resources and School Funding" in Gary T. Burtless, editor, "Effect of School Resources on Student Achievement" (Brookings Institution Press, 1996),pp. 68−69
  24. ^ See also Eric Hanushek and Alfred Lindseth, Schoolhouses, Courthouses, and Statehouses (Princeton University Press, 2009), p. 57
  25. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, "Teacher Characteristics and Gains in Student Achievement: Estimation Using Micro-Data," American Economic Review, 61(2), May 1971, pp. 280–88; Eric A. Hanushek, "The Trade-off Between Child Quantity and Quality," Journal of Political Economy, 100(1), February 1992, pp. 84–117; Steven G. Rivkin, Eric A. Hanushek, and John F. Kain, "Teachers, Schools, and Academic Achievement," Econometrica 73(2), March 2005, pp. 417–58.
  26. ^ James S. Coleman et al., Equality of Educational Opportunity (Washington, DC, 1966)
  27. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, "The Trade-off Between Child Quantity and Quality," Journal of Political Economy, 100 :1 (February 1992): 84–117.
  28. ^ Eric A. Hanushek and Steven G. Rivkin, "The distribution of teacher quality and implications for policy," Annual Review of Economics 4 (2012): 7.1–7.27
  29. ^ Jason Felch, Jason Song, and Doug Smith, "Grading the teachers: Who's teaching L.A.'s kids?" Los Angeles Times, August 14, 2010.
  30. ^ Kathryn M. Doherty and Sandi Jacobs,Connect the Dots: Using evaluations of teacher effectiveness to inform policy and practice. Washington, DC: National Council on Teacher Quality (October 2013)
  31. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, "Teacher deselection." In Creating a new teaching profession, edited by Dan Goldhaber and Jane Hannaway. (Washington, DC: Urban Institute Press, 2009: 165–80); Eric A. Hanushek, "The economic value of higher teacher quality, Economics of Education Review 30, no. 3 (June 2011): 466–79; and Eric A. Hanushek, "Valuing teachers: How much is a good teacher worth?" Education Next 11, no. 3 (Summer 2011).
  32. ^ Jennifer Medina, "Judge Rejects Teacher Tenure for California", New York Times, June 10, 2014.
  33. ^ Adam Nagourney, "California Governor Appeals Court Ruling Overturning Protections for Teachers," New York Times, August 30, 2014.
  34. ^ Jessica Levinson, "Teacher Tenure: Taking It to the Courts," Huffington Post, October 22, 2014.
  35. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on July 20, 2013. Retrieved December 7, 2013.
  36. ^ Thomas J.Kane, Daniel F. McCaffrey, Trey Miller, and Douglas O. Staiger, "Have We Identified Effective Teachers? Validating Measures of Effective Teaching Using Random Assignment: MET Project: Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation", January 2013.
  37. ^ Raj Chetty, John N. Friedman, and Jonah Rockoff, "Measuring the Impacts of Teachers I: Evaluating Bias in Teacher Value-Added Estimates", American Economic Review, September 2014, and Raj Chetty, John N. Friedman, and Jonah Rockoff, "Measuring the Impacts of Teachers II: Teacher value-added and the student outcomes in adulthood", American Economic Review, September 2014.
  38. ^ Margaret Terry Orr, "Review of Two Articles on Principal Effects", National Education Policy Center (March 2013) NEPC
  39. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, John F. Kain, Jacob M. Markman, and Steven G. Rivkin, "Does peer ability affect student achievement?" Journal of Applied Econometrics 18(5), September/October 2003: 527–44.
  40. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, John F. Kain, and Steve G. Rivkin, "New evidence about Brown v. Board of Education: The complex effects of school racial composition on achievement," Journal of Labor Economics 27(3), July 2009: 349–83.
  41. ^ Eric A. Hanushek and Steven G. Rivkin, "Harming the best: How schools affect the black-white achievement gap." Journal of Policy Analysis and Management 28:3 (Summer 2009): 366–93.
  42. ^ Hanushek, Eric (2017). "For long-term economic development, only skills matter". IZA World of Labor. doi:10.15185/izawol.343. S2CID 185228984. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  43. ^ Eric A. Hanushek and Dennis Kimko, "Schooling, Labor Force Quality, and the Growth of Nations," American Economic Review, 90(5), December 2000, pp. 1184–208; Eric A. Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann,"The Role of Cognitive Skills in Economic Development" , Journal of Economic Literature 46(3), September 2008:pp. 607–68
  44. ^ Mark Bils and Peter J. Klenow, "Does schooling cause growth?" American Economic Review 90(5), December 2000: 1160–183.
  45. ^ Eric A. Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann, "Do better schools lead to more growth? Cognitive skills, economic outcomes, and causation," Journal of Economic Growth, 17(4), December 2012: 267–321.
  46. ^ Breton, T. R. (2011). "The quality vs. The quantity of schooling: What drives economic growth?". Economics of Education Review. 30 (4): 765–773. doi:10.1016/j.econedurev.2011.01.005. hdl:10784/2438.
  47. ^ Eric A. Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann, "How much do educational outcomes matter in OECD countries?" Economic Policy 26(67), July 2011: 427–91.
  48. ^ Eric A. Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann, "Schooling, Educational Achievement, and the Latin American Growth Puzzle," Journal of Economic Development 99(2), November 2012: 497–512.
  49. ^ Eric A. Hanushek and Lei Zhang, "Quality-consistent estimates of international schooling and skill gradients." Journal of Human Capital 3(2), Summer 2009: 107–43.
  50. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, "Valuing Teachers," Education Next, 11(3), Summer 2011.
  51. ^ Eric A. Hanushek and Margaret E. Raymond, "Does school accountability lead to improved student performance?" Journal of Policy Analysis and Management 24(2), Spring 2005: 297–327
  52. ^ David Figlio and Susanna Loeb,"School accountability" In Handbook of the Economics of Education, Vol. 3, edited by Eric A. Hanushek, Stephen Machin, and Ludger Woessmann (Amsterdam: North Holland, 2011): 383–421.
  53. ^ Michael Hout and Stuart W. Elliott (eds.), Incentives and test-based accountability in education (Washington, DC: National Academies Press), 2011.
  54. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, "Grinding the anti-testing ax: More bias than evidence behind NRC panel's conclusions", Education Next 12:2 (Spring 2012): 49–55.
  55. ^ John Robert Warren and Eric Grodsky, "No Axe to Grind: A Response to Hanushek," Educational Policy 26: 3 (May 2012: 352–59) and Eric A. Hanushek, "A flawed analysis of unrepresentative state achievement data," Educational Policy 26: 3 (May 2012): 360–68.
  56. ^ Eric A. Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann, "The economics of international differences in educational achievement" in Handbook of the Economics of Education, Vol. 3, edited by Eric A. Hanushek, Stephen Machin, and Ludger Woessmann (Amsterdam: North Holland, 2011): 89–200.
  57. ^ Julian R. Betts, "The Economics of Tracking in Education" in Handbook of the Economics of Education, edited by Stephen Machin Eric A. Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann (Amsterdam: North Holland, 2011): 341–81. Hanushek and Woessmann identify the impact of systemic tracking by comparing differences in student outcomes between primary and secondary schools across tracked and non-tracked systems. See" Eric A. Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann, "Does educational tracking affect performance and inequality? Differences-in-differences evidence across countries." Economic Journal 116( 510), March 2006: C63–76.
  58. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, Susanne Link, and Ludger Woessmann, "Does school autonomy make sense everywhere? Panel estimates from PISA." Journal of Development Economics forthcoming.
  59. ^ Dirk Krueger and Krishna B. Kumar, "US-Europe differences in technology-driven growth: quantifying the role of education," Journal of Monetary Economics 51(1), January 2004: 161–90.
  60. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, Guido Schwerdt, Ludger Woessmann, and Lei Zhang, "General Education, Vocational Education, and Labor-Market Outcomes over the Life-Cycle," Journal of Human Resources 52(1), Winter 2017: 48-87.
  61. ^ Eric A. Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann, Education quality and economic growth (Washington: World Bank, 2007).
  62. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, Victor Lavy, and Kohtaro Hitomi, "Do students care about school quality? Determinants of dropout behavior in developing countries," Journal of Human Capital 1(2), Spring 2008: 69–105.
  63. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, "Interpreting recent research on schooling in developing countries," World Bank Research Observer 10(2), August 1995: 227–46.
  64. ^ Ralph W. Harbison and Eric A. Hanushek, Educational performance of the poor: lessons from rural northeast Brazil (New York: Oxford University Press, 1992).
  65. ^ João Batista Gomes-Neto and Eric A. Hanushek, "Causes and consequences of grade repetition: Evidence from Brazil," Economic Development and Cultural Change 43(1), October 1994: 117–48; Eric A. Hanushek, João Batista Gomes-Neto, and Ralph W. Harbison, "Efficiency-enhancing investments in school quality" in Opportunity foregone: Education in Brazil, edited by Nancy Birdsall and Richard H. Sabot (Washington, DC: Inter-American Development Bank, 1996): 385–424.
  66. ^ Texas Schools Project
  67. ^ See Eric A. Hanushek, John F. Kain, and Steve G. Rivkin, "Why public schools lose teachers," Journal of Human Resources 39(2), Spring 2004: 326–54; Eric A. Hanushek and Steven G. Rivkin, "Constrained Job Matching: Does Teacher Job Search Harm Disadvantaged Urban Schools?" NBER w15816 (Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, March2010)
  68. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, John F. Kain, and Steve G. Rivkin, "Inferring program effects for specialized populations: Does special education raise achievement for students with disabilities?" Review of Economics and Statistics 84(4), November 2002: 584–99.
  69. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, John F. Kain, and Steve G. Rivkin, "Disruption versus Tiebout improvement: The costs and benefits of switching schools," Journal of Public Economics 88(9–10), 2004: 1721–746.
  70. ^ Eric A. Hanushek, John F. Kain, Steve G. Rivkin, and Gregory F. Branch, "Charter school quality and parental decision making with school choice," Journal of Public Economics 91(5-6), June 2007: 823–48.
  71. ^ Hanushek et al. (2013).
  72. ^ Joel Klein; Condoleezza Rice; Julia Levy (March 2012), U.S. Education Reform and National Security, Council on Foreign Relations, Wikidata Q106908308, p. 3; emphasis in the original. Cited on p. 4 of Hanushek et al. (2013).
  73. ^ Hanushek et al. (2013, p. 12).

External links

  • Eric Hanushek Eric Hanushek's Stanford University web site.
  • Robison, Mark. Fact Checker: The Facts Behind the News. "Is there no link between spending more on schools and improved student performance?" Reno Gazette-Journal, August 26, 2012.
  • Appearances on C-SPAN

eric, hanushek, eric, alan, hanushek, born, 1943, economist, written, prolifically, public, policy, with, special, emphasis, economics, education, since, 2000, been, paul, jean, hanna, senior, fellow, hoover, institution, american, public, policy, think, tank,. Eric Alan Hanushek ˈ h ae n e ʃ ɛ k 1 born May 22 1943 is an economist who has written prolifically on public policy with a special emphasis on the economics of education Since 2000 he has been a Paul and Jean Hanna Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution 2 3 4 an American public policy think tank located at Stanford University in California He was awarded the Yidan Prize for Education Research in 2021 Eric A HanushekEric Hanushek speaking in 2012Born 1943 05 22 May 22 1943 age 79 Lakewood OhioNationalityAmericanInstitutionStanford UniversityUniversity of RochesterYale UniversityFieldEducation economicsAlma materMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyUnited States Air Force AcademyAwardsYidan Prize for Education Research 2021Information at IDEAS RePEcHanushek advocates using economic analysis to improve student performance He has authored numerous highly cited 5 articles on the effects of class size reduction high stakes accountability teacher effectiveness and other education related topics In a 1971 paper he introduced the concept of evaluating teacher effectiveness on the basis of student learning gains 6 This idea is the basis of value added assessments of teacher quality In his most recent book The Knowledge Capital of Nations Hanushek concludes that the quality of education is causally related to economic growth 7 Hanushek is a frequent contributor to the opinion pages of the Wall Street Journal and also appears frequently in court cases as a paid expert witness testifying for the state in lawsuits brought by plaintiffs attempting to equalize disparities in funding of school districts 8 Contents 1 Activities appointments and awards 2 Personal life 3 As expert witness 4 Research 4 1 The relationship between resources and class size and academic performance 4 2 Effect of teacher and administrator quality on learning gains 4 3 Effects of peers and school racial composition 4 4 Economic impact of education 4 5 Accountability 4 6 Institutional design 4 7 Ability tracking and local control 4 8 Education in developing countries 4 9 The Texas Schools Project 5 Publications 6 References 7 Notes 8 External linksActivities appointments and awards EditHanushek received a Bachelor of Science degree from the United States Air Force Academy in 1965 and a PhD in economics from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1968 He served in the U S Air Force from 1961 to 1974 Hanushek held teaching positions at the U S Air Force Academy 1968 73 and at Yale University 1975 78 and was named professor of economics and public policy at the University of Rochester from 1978 to 2000 Hanushek is a member of the Hoover Institution s Koret Task Force on K 12 Education whose members including Caroline M Hoxby and Paul E Peterson support school accountability teacher incentives and charter schools and vouchers Hanushek was a presidential appointee to the Board of Directors of the National Board for Education Sciences that approves the research priorities of the U S Department of Education s Institute of Education Sciences and was the Board chair from 2008 to 2010 From 2011 to 2013 he served on the Equity and Excellence Commission of the U S Department of Education He is a research professor at the Ifo Institute for Economic Research University of Munich and is the area coordinator for Economics of Education CESifo Research Network He is also a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research and a research fellow of the Institute for the Study of Labor IZA In the U S federal government Hanushek has served as deputy director of the Congressional Budget Office senior staff economist at the Council of Economic Advisers and senior economist for the Cost of Living Council At the state level he has been appointed to state education advisory commissions by the governor of California and of Texas Hanushek was the recipient of an award for scholarship from the Thomas B Fordham Institute a think tank in 2004 Personal life EditHanushek is married to Margaret Macke Raymond director of the Center for Research on Education Outcomes CREDO at Stanford University CREDO has issued numerous studies of the performance of charter schools in the United States As expert witness EditSince the early 1970s when plaintiffs have filed lawsuits seeking to overthrow school funding based on local property taxes as inequitable Hanushek has been called to testify as an expert witness in defense of the state He testifies that the problem with schools is not so much lack of funds as inefficiency and asserts that increasing or seeking to equalize appropriations can be wasteful since his analyses show that more funding produces inconsistent outcomes 9 Instead of seeking to equalize funding among districts Hanushek recommends introducing value added testing to identify and remove underperforming teachers greater accountability and vouchers and charter schools to introduce market based parental choice He labels those who oppose these measures as wanting to protect special interests and sacred cows and accuses them of wanting to maintain the status quo In particular Hanushek identifies teachers unions among the entrenched or special interests that oppose the measures he recommends 10 The 20 school funding trials at which Hanushek has testified over the years include Serrano v Priest 1973 in California Somerset County Board of Education v Hornbeck in Maryland 1980 and Abbott v Burke 1987 in New Jersey His amicus brief was cited in the 2009 five to four U S Supreme Court decision of Horne v Flores Citing Hanushek and Lindseth in a majority opinion written by Justice Samuel Alito the court held that in evaluating the actions of the state attention should focus on student outcomes rather than on inequalities of spending and other inputs to schools In 2011 Hanushek was the central expert witness for the defense in the highly publicized case of Lobato vs State of Colorado named for Taylor Lobato who in 2005 was a middle school student when her parents filed a suit that claimed her San Luis Valley school district was underfunded compared to wealthier districts In that case Denver District Judge Sheila Rappaport issued a 189 page decision rejecting the state s arguments writing that Dr Hanushek s analysis that there is not much relationship in Colorado between spending and achievement contradicts testimony and documentary evidence from dozens of well respected educators in the State defies logic and is statistically flawed 11 In 2013 the Colorado Supreme Court reversed Judge Rappaport s opinion and overturned the lower court s opinion in its entirety For his part Hanushek maintains that state and federal court decisions of the type we describe namely rejecting funding equity appeals may be justified because they may persuade the legislature to adopt the more disruptive reforms that may actually lead to improvements in student achievement 12 Research EditHanushek s Ph D thesis introduced a model that he termed an educational production function into the analysis of education issues 13 This model postulated a clear distinction between inputs to education including family neighborhood and peer factors and outcomes of education typically measured by student achievement continuation in school or ultimately income and employment 14 According to Hanushek when placed in the common value added form his model identifies the impact of added resources given prior achievement and other non school factors The relationship between resources and class size and academic performance Edit His 1986 paper The Economics of Schooling 15 reported finding an inconsistent relationship between school resources and student outcomes It provoked numerous responses 16 For this reason he is associated especially by his detractors with the slogan money doesn t matter One critic Larry Hedges used meta analysis of Hanushek s own figures to contend that 100 spent per pupil 1989 dollars would in fact raise student achievement by one fifth of a standard deviation 17 Between 1990 and 2010 however spending per pupil adjusted for inflation rose by 3500 while reading scores of 17 year olds actually fell 18 Hanushek responded to critics in Money might matter somewhere 19 Hanushek maintains that how money is spent is more important than how much money is spent now a commonly accepted interpretation of the data He suggests that money allocated ought to be spent implementing the policies with proven efficacy such as replacing teachers who fail to raise test scores and closing schools which persistently fail to produce reasonable student achievement Citing with approval Frederick M Hess of the American Enterprise Institute he argues that court decisions over funding adequacy may create a policy window in which judicial cover is provided for legislative activities and a variety of remedies are put forward These windows have been mainly used to push through higher funding but there is no reason that court decisions could not also open a window during which other reforms such as those discussed in this book might also be enacted 20 Hanushek s other claim that class size has no consistent effect on educational performance 21 is vehemently disputed by Alan Krueger 22 among others The debate is summed up in Lawrence Mishel and Richard Rothstein eds The class size debate Washington DC Economic Policy Institute 2002 See also the peer reviewed assessment of the evidence in Ronald G Ehrenberg Dominic J Brewer Adam Gamoran and J Douglas Willms Class size and student achievement Psychological Science in the Public Interest 2 no 1 May 2001 1 30Hanushek explains his position this way The discussion whether school resources are systematically related to school quality and to school achievement has tended toward a battle of slogans Money matters or Money doesn t matter It is tautological to say that we will get good performance if we spend the money wisely Today the existing knowledge base does not ensure that any added funds will on average be spent wisely That is true even if some schools may spend their funds wisely 23 24 As an alternative to increasing funding for public schools as a way to boost student performance Hanushek recommends holding schools accountable and assessing teacher effectiveness Effect of teacher and administrator quality on learning gains Edit Hanushek concludes that teacher quality is by far the most important factor in raising student achievement and moreover that teacher quality is not closely related to such factors as teacher salaries educational background or experience In considering teacher policies test scores should be one metric by which the quality of teachers should be measured Hanushek contends 25 In contrast to James Coleman who in the 1960s had suggested that schools and teachers had little effect on student performance 26 Hanushek introduced the idea of judging teacher effectiveness based on the learning gains of students Hanushek s 1992 study of inner city children showed that disadvantaged pupils taught by good teachers gained one and one half years of learning as opposed to only six months when taught by poor teachers that is a difference of a full school year 27 This finding he maintained had highly significant policy implications 28 Hanushek s approach underlies the development of value added assessment methods of teacher effectiveness which uses statistical analysis of student achievement information as measured by pupil scores to evaluate teacher performance When applied in teacher personnel decisions value added assessment has been highly controversial In 2010 the value added rankings for more than 6 000 teachers were published in the Los Angeles Times resulting in complaints by teachers and their unions that they were being subjected to public shaming 29 The New York Times also subsequently published such measures for their local teachers Nonetheless a significant number of states now require that teacher evaluations include consideration of student achievement and in some cases require the use of value added measures 30 In a series of papers Hanushek argued that replacing the least effective 5 8 percent of teachers with an average teacher could lead to dramatic gains in achievement for U S students 31 By his calculations average U S PISA scores would increase to the level of Canada or maybe even Finland and that higher U S growth would lead to substantial economic gains These arguments have led to a continuing and contentious debate One side has argued that this analysis supports arguments for improving teacher evaluations and for eliminating teacher tenure The other side has argued that it is not possible to fire yourself to the top Hanushek s analyses of teacher value added and of the impact of teacher effectiveness on economic outcomes of students were central to the California court case of Vergara v California a case in which he subsequently testified for the plaintiffs That court case challenged the constitutionality of the teacher tenure and the teacher dismissal statutes in California In June 2014 Judge Ralph M Treu issued his ruling in the case finding that the statutes in question were unconstitutional 32 This ruling was subsequently appealed by the California Teachers Association and by Governor Jerry Brown 33 A follow on suit was filed in New York State 34 Princeton University economist Jesse M Rothstein has described the use of value added measurement for evaluating teacher performance recommended by Hanushek as early as 1971 as conceptually deeply flawed since value added scores assume that students are randomly assigned to teachers whereas in the real world it is almost never the case for students to be randomly assigned to teachers or schools Non random assignment of students to teachers can bias value added estimates of teachers causal effects Rothstein writes 35 Daniel F McCaffrey and Thomas Kane of the Measures of Effective Teaching Project of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation had published studies supportive of Hanushek s contentions 36 as have Raj Chetty William Henry Bloomberg Professor of Economics at Harvard et al 37 In addition to measuring teachers Hanushek has also applied his outcome based approach to measuring the effectiveness of school principals whom he states also greatly impact student achievement through their role in selecting and retaining good teachers This research appeared as working paper Estimating the effects of leaders on public sector productivity The case of school principals published by the National Bureau of Economic Research 2012 The same authors also issued a more general article School Leaders Matter explaining their conclusions in the Hoover Institute magazine Education Next 13 1 Winter 2013 In a review Margaret Terry Orr agreed that principals can have positive effects but she questioned whether value added methods could ever adequately measure their performance faulting the authors for using sloppy terminology and ignoring a large body of research 38 Effects of peers and school racial composition Edit Together with co authors John Kain and Steven Rivkin Hanushek has studied the influence of peer ability on achievement in elementary classrooms in Texas concluding that the achievement level of peers exerts a positive influence whose impact is roughly constant across the achievement distribution 39 In contrast the variance in achievement appears to have no systematic influence leading them to conclude that ability grouping per se has no separate impact Hanushek et al also found that achievement levels of black students but not of white or Hispanic students appeared to be systematically lowered in the presence of large concentrations of other black students in their school 40 They found this effect to be especially pronounced among the highest achieving black students 41 These results in their view underscore the importance of school integration Economic impact of education Edit Average annual growth rate in real GDP per capita vs scores on standardized tests of student achievement 1960 2000 adjusted for 1960 GDP per capita From Hanushek and Woessmann 2015 Table 1A 1 similar to their Figure 1 1 Hanushek contends that in both individuals and nations cognitive skills are causally related to economic outcomes such that variations in growth rates across countries can be largely explained by consideration of the role of cognitive skills 42 43 Previous studies have measured human capital through years of schooling attained by the labor force 44 Hanushek however believes that cognitive skills as measured by international test scores give a more accurate picture in industrialized and developing countries alike 45 Breton has challenged the validity of Hanushek s claim that cognitive skills as measured by international test scores are a more accurate indicator of a nation s capabilities than years of schooling 46 He argues that the statistical analysis that Hanushek and Woessmann use to support this claim is invalid because their model is mis specified Differences in economic growth among Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development OECD countries closely reflect differences in mathematics and science achievement 47 Differences in achievement also appear to explain completely the slow growth of Latin America 48 At the individual level differences in cognitive skills across countries receive varying rewards in the labor market The U S appears to reward skills the most while Poland Sweden and the Czech Republic provide the least return among selected countries 49 Linking teacher value added measurement with research on the economic impact of differences in achievement both for individual earnings and for economic growth Hanushek estimates that the impact of differences in teacher quality is significant and the least effective teachers in U S schools have an especially large impact He estimates that replacing the least effective 5 8 percent of teachers with an average teacher would increase the Gross Domestic Product GDP by 75 to 110 trillion dollars in present value 50 He discussed the impact of replacing low performing bottom 5 teachers with average teachers in the movie Waiting for Superman Accountability Edit Hanushek forcefully advocates instituting state and federal accountability systems to improve student achievement 51 even while acknowledging that existing accountability systems have also been shown to introduce some unwanted outcomes 52 In 2011 a United States National Research Council panel issued a report that concluded that empirical results do not support the use of such test based accountability policies such as the No Child Left Behind Act and high school exit exams The report concluded that such incentives which now have been in place for many years at best have succeeded in raising scores only minutely in the earliest grades and then only in math The panel also reported that high school exit exams serve only to increase the dropout rate and have no effect on scores 53 Hanushek responded in the pages of Education Next published by the Hoover Institution accusing the panel of bias and calling its evidence of poor or non existent educational improvement weak 54 Since then arguments about test based incentives and school exit exams has intensified 55 The re authorization of the No Child Left Behind Act and plans for expansion of high school exit examinations now hinge on the outcome of these debates Institutional design Edit The operations of schools within are shaped and affected by the structure of each country s schooling making it difficult to assess the significance of the educational environment Together with Ludger Woessmann of the University of Munich and other co authors Hanushek has developed comparative data based approaches for identifying the impact of differing educational systems 56 Ability tracking and local control Edit Hanushek is on record as opposing early ability tracking on the grounds that research shows that early tracking increases educational inequality and can reduce average performance Countries that separate students into different tracks early tend to increase the variation in student achievement 57 Countries also differ in how much local decision making they permit in their schools Using a method of their own devising Hanushek Woessmann and Susanne Link used international assessment data from the Programme for International Student Assessment or PISA to compare changes in student achievement within individual countries to changes in local autonomy over various educational decisions 58 They concluded that in developed countries local decision making impacts positively on student performance This was also more true where countries had external examinations for students They caution however that it might not be valid to generalize such findings from developed countries to developing countries In less developed countries particularly where there was no monitoring of schools through external examinations local decision making was harmful Hanushek also looked at the effects of vocational education versus general education Some analyses suggest that emphasis of specific skills through vocational schooling can result in slower economic growth 59 since workers with very specific training might be able to find work more easily when young but may be disadvantaged later when new technologies make their skills obsolete Hanushek Guido Schwerdt Woessmann and Lei Zhang compared the life cycle employment and earnings patterns of those with vocational and general education across countries and found that workers in the most vocation intensive countries apprenticeship countries did suffer later in their careers and tended to leave the labor force noticeably earlier than workers with general training 60 Education in developing countries Edit Development agencies such as the World Bank and UNESCO have traditionally emphasized expanding access through such initiatives as Education for All and the Millennium Development Goals Hanushek and Woessmann however caution that merely improving access can do little unless students cognitive skills are raised which they say is not happening in many developing countries 61 They also linked poor quality schools to high dropout rates 62 Hanushek s work for the World Bank showed that in developing countries as in the U S policies intended to improve educational resources have not been consistently productive even though in developing countries they have noticeably lower levels of inputs 63 In the poorest areas of Brazil for example Hanushek and Ralph Harbison contended that large differences among schools and teachers were not systematically related to teacher education teacher experience and most other measures of general resources of schools 64 Hanushek has advocated targeted policies such as providing text books which can lead to more efficient schooling by cutting down on grade repetition 65 The Texas Schools Project Edit As chairman of the Executive Committee for the Texas Schools Project at the University of Texas at Dallas UTD Hanushek worked with John F Kain to develop the university s Texas Schools Project 66 This project used administrative data from schools to compile databases to permit the analysis of the effects of teacher labor markets 67 and the impacts of special education 68 student mobility school choice 69 and charter schools 70 The Texas Schools Project was the model for similar administrative databases such as found in Florida North Carolina and New York Publications EditHanushek s 2013 book Endangering Prosperity A Global View of the American School 71 written with Hoover Institute colleague Paul E Peterson and Ludger Woessmann of the University of Munich has a foreword by former President of Harvard Lawrence Summers It makes the case that poor or average scores on the international Programme for International Student Assessment PISA test will cause the US to lose its economic pre eminence over other nations Worse America s failure to educate is affecting its national security according to a 2012 task force co chaired by former New York City school chancellor Joel Klein and former US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice 72 Moreover if the US educational achievement were to match that of Canada their model suggests that over the next 80 years the average annual income of every worker in the United States would be 20 percent higher all other things being equal Discounted to the present the gains from a faster growing economy over the lifetime of someone born today would amount to five times our current GDP 73 In 2012 he authored an article entitled Education Quality and Economic Growth in The 4 Solution Unleashing the Economic Growth America Needs published by the George W Bush Presidential Center Hanushek s 2009 book with Alfred Lindseth Schoolhouses Courthouses and Statehouses Solving the Funding Achievement Puzzle in America s Public Schools Princeton University Press makes the case that increasing money for public schools produces inconsistent results and advocates performance based funding to improve school outcomes Other books Hanushek has written or edited include Courting Failure How School Finance Lawsuits Exploit Judges Good Intentions And Harm Our Children Education Next Books Hoover Institution Press 2006 Handbook of the Economics of Education Handbooks in Economics a four volume series which Hanushek edited with Stephen J Machin Finis Welch and Ludger Woessmann North Holland Press 2006 2010 and 2011 The Economics of Schooling and School Quality International Library of Critical Writings in Economics Edward Elgar 2003 Improving America s Schools The Role of Incentives National National Academies Press 1996 co edited with Dale W Jorgenson Making Schools Work Improving Performance and Controlling Costs Brookings Institution Press 1996 Educational Performance of the Poor Lessons from Rural Northeast Brazil A World Bank Publication Oxford University Press USA 1992 co written with H Ralph Harbison and Education and Education and Race An Analysis of the Educational Production Process Lexington Books 1972 References EditEric Hanushek Paul E Peterson Ludger Woessmann 2013 Endangering prosperity A global view of the American school Brookings Institution Press ISBN 978 0 8157 0373 0 OL 31138267M Wikidata Q56849246 Eric Hanushek Ludger Woessmann 2015 The knowledge capital of nations Education and the economics of growth MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 02917 9 OL 28159705M Wikidata Q56849351 Notes Edit Office Hours Eric Hanushek Answers Your Questions On Teacher Quality PolicyEd Hoover Institution August 17 2017 Archived from the original on 2021 12 21 Retrieved September 18 2020 The Hoover Institution has been labeled a conservative institution See for example Lindsay Leon June 2 1983 Stanford s conservative think tank is under fire The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved 30 August 2013 de Lama George March 3 1993 With GOP out of power conservative think tank is a quieter place Chicago Tribune Retrieved 30 August 2013 Think tank s Hoover Tower turns 50 Daily News of Los Angeles July 19 1991 Retrieved 30 August 2013 Google scholar for Eric Hanushek Eric A Hanushek Teacher characteristics and gains in student achievement Estimation using micro data American Economic Review 60 no 2 May 1971 280 88 See the history in Elizabeth Green Building a better teacher How teaching works and how to teach it to everyone New York W W Norton and Company 2014 Hanushek Eric Woessmann Ludger 2015 The Knowledge Capital of Nations Education and the Economics of Growth MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 02917 9 Reporter Kevin Carey interviewing Hanushek in 2006 stated You mentioned school funding lawsuits You ve served as an expert witness in a number of those lawsuits always working for states defending themselves against charges that their school funding systems unfairly short change some school districts To which Hanushek replied I have I ve been involved in those cases over a long period of time I have always testified on the defense side i e against funding equity See Kevin Carey Money Matters An interview with Eric Hanushek Archived 2013 09 08 at the Wayback Machine EducationSector at the American Institutes For Research April 26 2006 See also Adrienne Lu States sued over education funding USA Today February 18 2014 and Joanne Wasserman Judge Wasn t Impressed by Expensive Experts New York Daily News March 9 2001 which mentions that the State of New York State spent 1 4 million of taxpayer money on expert testimony in one such case of which Hanushek received 50 000 for his testimony and analysis Kate Alexander School Finance Trial Expert More money might not fix Texas schools Austin American Statesman January 1 2013 See Eric Hanushek and Alfred Lindseth Schoolhouses Courthouses and Statehouses Solving the Funding Achievement Puzzle in America s Public Schools Princeton University Press 2009 p 270 and passim Todd Engdahl Ruling a clean sweep for Lobato Plaintiffs EdNews Colorado December 12 2011 See also Tim Hoover Denver judge s ruling on school funding levels blisters state s witnesses Denver Post December 1 2011 Hanushek and Lindseth Schoolhouses Courthouses and Statehouses 2009 p 287 Eric A Hanushek The Education of Negroes and Whites PhD Thesis Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1968 see also the expanded version Eric A Hanushek Education and Race An Analysis of the Educational Production Process Lexington MA D C Heath 1972 Eric A Hanushek Conceptual and empirical issues in the estimation of educational production functions Journal of Human Resources 14 3 Summer 1979 351 88 Eric A Hanushek The economics of schooling Journal of Economic Literature 49 3 September 1986 pp 1141 177 See for example Gary Burtless ed Does money matter The effect of school resources on student achievement and adult success Washington DC Brookings 1996 Larry V Hedges Richard D Laine and Rob Greenwald Does money matter A meta analysis of studies of the effects of differential school inputs on student outcomes Educational Researcher 23 3 April 1994 5 14 See also Morton Hunt How science takes stock the story of meta analysis 1997 The Russell Sage Foundation New York U S Department of Education Digest of Education Statistics 2012 Tables 213 and 140 Eric A Hanushek Money might matter somewhere A response to Hedges Laine and Greenwald Educational Researcher 23 4 May 1994 5 8 Eric Hanushek and Alfred Lindseth Schoolhouses Courthouses and Statehouses Solving the Funding Achievement Puzzle in America s Public Schools Princeton University Press 2009 pp 285 86 Eric A Hanushek The failure of input based schooling policies Economic Journal 113 February 2003 pp F64 98 Alan B Krueger Understanding the magnitude and effect of class size on student achievement in The Class Size Debate edited by Lawrence Mishel and Richard Rothstein Washington DC Economic Policy Institute 2002 7 35 Eric A Hanushek Evidence politics and the class size debate in The Class Size Debate edited by Lawrence Mishel and Richard Rothstein Washington DC Economic Policy Institute 2002 37 65 Eric Hanushek School Resources and School Funding in Gary T Burtless editor Effect of School Resources on Student Achievement Brookings Institution Press 1996 pp 68 69 See also Eric Hanushek and Alfred Lindseth Schoolhouses Courthouses and Statehouses Princeton University Press 2009 p 57 Eric A Hanushek Teacher Characteristics and Gains in Student Achievement Estimation Using Micro Data American Economic Review 61 2 May 1971 pp 280 88 Eric A Hanushek The Trade off Between Child Quantity and Quality Journal of Political Economy 100 1 February 1992 pp 84 117 Steven G Rivkin Eric A Hanushek and John F Kain Teachers Schools and Academic Achievement Econometrica 73 2 March 2005 pp 417 58 James S Coleman et al Equality of Educational Opportunity Washington DC 1966 Eric A Hanushek The Trade off Between Child Quantity and Quality Journal of Political Economy 100 1 February 1992 84 117 Eric A Hanushek and Steven G Rivkin The distribution of teacher quality and implications for policy Annual Review of Economics 4 2012 7 1 7 27 Jason Felch Jason Song and Doug Smith Grading the teachers Who s teaching L A s kids Los Angeles Times August 14 2010 Kathryn M Doherty and Sandi Jacobs Connect the Dots Using evaluations of teacher effectiveness to inform policy and practice Washington DC National Council on Teacher Quality October 2013 Eric A Hanushek Teacher deselection In Creating a new teaching profession edited by Dan Goldhaber and Jane Hannaway Washington DC Urban Institute Press 2009 165 80 Eric A Hanushek The economic value of higher teacher quality Economics of Education Review 30 no 3 June 2011 466 79 and Eric A Hanushek Valuing teachers How much is a good teacher worth Education Next 11 no 3 Summer 2011 Jennifer Medina Judge Rejects Teacher Tenure for California New York Times June 10 2014 Adam Nagourney California Governor Appeals Court Ruling Overturning Protections for Teachers New York Times August 30 2014 Jessica Levinson Teacher Tenure Taking It to the Courts Huffington Post October 22 2014 Jessie M Rothstein Student sorting and bias in value added estimation Selection on observables and unobservables Princeton University and NBER January 11 2009 PDF Archived from the original PDF on July 20 2013 Retrieved December 7 2013 Thomas J Kane Daniel F McCaffrey Trey Miller and Douglas O Staiger Have We Identified Effective Teachers Validating Measures of Effective Teaching Using Random Assignment MET Project Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation January 2013 Raj Chetty John N Friedman and Jonah Rockoff Measuring the Impacts of Teachers I Evaluating Bias in Teacher Value Added Estimates American Economic Review September 2014 and Raj Chetty John N Friedman and Jonah Rockoff Measuring the Impacts of Teachers II Teacher value added and the student outcomes in adulthood American Economic Review September 2014 Margaret Terry Orr Review of Two Articles on Principal Effects National Education Policy Center March 2013 NEPC Eric A Hanushek John F Kain Jacob M Markman and Steven G Rivkin Does peer ability affect student achievement Journal of Applied Econometrics 18 5 September October 2003 527 44 Eric A Hanushek John F Kain and Steve G Rivkin New evidence about Brown v Board of Education The complex effects of school racial composition on achievement Journal of Labor Economics 27 3 July 2009 349 83 Eric A Hanushek and Steven G Rivkin Harming the best How schools affect the black white achievement gap Journal of Policy Analysis and Management 28 3 Summer 2009 366 93 Hanushek Eric 2017 For long term economic development only skills matter IZA World of Labor doi 10 15185 izawol 343 S2CID 185228984 Retrieved 2 May 2021 Eric A Hanushek and Dennis Kimko Schooling Labor Force Quality and the Growth of Nations American Economic Review 90 5 December 2000 pp 1184 208 Eric A Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann The Role of Cognitive Skills in Economic Development Journal of Economic Literature 46 3 September 2008 pp 607 68 Mark Bils and Peter J Klenow Does schooling cause growth American Economic Review 90 5 December 2000 1160 183 Eric A Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann Do better schools lead to more growth Cognitive skills economic outcomes and causation Journal of Economic Growth 17 4 December 2012 267 321 Breton T R 2011 The quality vs The quantity of schooling What drives economic growth Economics of Education Review 30 4 765 773 doi 10 1016 j econedurev 2011 01 005 hdl 10784 2438 Eric A Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann How much do educational outcomes matter in OECD countries Economic Policy 26 67 July 2011 427 91 Eric A Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann Schooling Educational Achievement and the Latin American Growth Puzzle Journal of Economic Development 99 2 November 2012 497 512 Eric A Hanushek and Lei Zhang Quality consistent estimates of international schooling and skill gradients Journal of Human Capital 3 2 Summer 2009 107 43 Eric A Hanushek Valuing Teachers Education Next 11 3 Summer 2011 Eric A Hanushek and Margaret E Raymond Does school accountability lead to improved student performance Journal of Policy Analysis and Management 24 2 Spring 2005 297 327 David Figlio and Susanna Loeb School accountability In Handbook of the Economics of Education Vol 3 edited by Eric A Hanushek Stephen Machin and Ludger Woessmann Amsterdam North Holland 2011 383 421 Michael Hout and Stuart W Elliott eds Incentives and test based accountability in education Washington DC National Academies Press 2011 Eric A Hanushek Grinding the anti testing ax More bias than evidence behind NRC panel s conclusions Education Next 12 2 Spring 2012 49 55 John Robert Warren and Eric Grodsky No Axe to Grind A Response to Hanushek Educational Policy 26 3 May 2012 352 59 and Eric A Hanushek A flawed analysis of unrepresentative state achievement data Educational Policy 26 3 May 2012 360 68 Eric A Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann The economics of international differences in educational achievement in Handbook of the Economics of Education Vol 3 edited by Eric A Hanushek Stephen Machin and Ludger Woessmann Amsterdam North Holland 2011 89 200 Julian R Betts The Economics of Tracking in Education in Handbook of the Economics of Education edited by Stephen Machin Eric A Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann Amsterdam North Holland 2011 341 81 Hanushek and Woessmann identify the impact of systemic tracking by comparing differences in student outcomes between primary and secondary schools across tracked and non tracked systems See Eric A Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann Does educational tracking affect performance and inequality Differences in differences evidence across countries Economic Journal 116 510 March 2006 C63 76 Eric A Hanushek Susanne Link and Ludger Woessmann Does school autonomy make sense everywhere Panel estimates from PISA Journal of Development Economics forthcoming Dirk Krueger and Krishna B Kumar US Europe differences in technology driven growth quantifying the role of education Journal of Monetary Economics 51 1 January 2004 161 90 Eric A Hanushek Guido Schwerdt Ludger Woessmann and Lei Zhang General Education Vocational Education and Labor Market Outcomes over the Life Cycle Journal of Human Resources 52 1 Winter 2017 48 87 Eric A Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann Education quality and economic growth Washington World Bank 2007 Eric A Hanushek Victor Lavy and Kohtaro Hitomi Do students care about school quality Determinants of dropout behavior in developing countries Journal of Human Capital 1 2 Spring 2008 69 105 Eric A Hanushek Interpreting recent research on schooling in developing countries World Bank Research Observer 10 2 August 1995 227 46 Ralph W Harbison and Eric A Hanushek Educational performance of the poor lessons from rural northeast Brazil New York Oxford University Press 1992 Joao Batista Gomes Neto and Eric A Hanushek Causes and consequences of grade repetition Evidence from Brazil Economic Development and Cultural Change 43 1 October 1994 117 48 Eric A Hanushek Joao Batista Gomes Neto and Ralph W Harbison Efficiency enhancing investments in school quality in Opportunity foregone Education in Brazil edited by Nancy Birdsall and Richard H Sabot Washington DC Inter American Development Bank 1996 385 424 Texas Schools Project See Eric A Hanushek John F Kain and Steve G Rivkin Why public schools lose teachers Journal of Human Resources 39 2 Spring 2004 326 54 Eric A Hanushek and Steven G Rivkin Constrained Job Matching Does Teacher Job Search Harm Disadvantaged Urban Schools NBER w15816 Cambridge MA National Bureau of Economic Research March2010 Eric A Hanushek John F Kain and Steve G Rivkin Inferring program effects for specialized populations Does special education raise achievement for students with disabilities Review of Economics and Statistics 84 4 November 2002 584 99 Eric A Hanushek John F Kain and Steve G Rivkin Disruption versus Tiebout improvement The costs and benefits of switching schools Journal of Public Economics 88 9 10 2004 1721 746 Eric A Hanushek John F Kain Steve G Rivkin and Gregory F Branch Charter school quality and parental decision making with school choice Journal of Public Economics 91 5 6 June 2007 823 48 Hanushek et al 2013 Joel Klein Condoleezza Rice Julia Levy March 2012 U S Education Reform and National Security Council on Foreign Relations Wikidata Q106908308 p 3 emphasis in the original Cited on p 4 of Hanushek et al 2013 Hanushek et al 2013 p 12 External links EditEric Hanushek Eric Hanushek s Stanford University web site Robison Mark Fact Checker The Facts Behind the News Is there no link between spending more on schools and improved student performance Reno Gazette Journal August 26 2012 Appearances on C SPAN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eric Hanushek amp oldid 1131468500, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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