Publicly funded religious education expands

Another 43 religious schools have registered with the Department of Public Instruction (DPI) to receive tax dollars as the voucher subsidy program expands across the State. They join the 25 religious schools subsidized last year.  The limit on vouchers and their cost to taxpayers doubles next year to 1,000.  Every one of the 68 schools is religious.

By mcollins

Study: Habitual Truancy and School Report Cards in Milwaukee Schools

By Scott Wittkopf, Forward Institute

By mcollins

Study challenges same-sex school benefits

As many American public school districts adopt single-sex classrooms and even entire schools, a new study finds scant evidence that they offer educational or social benefits. The study was the largest and most thorough effort to examine the issue to date, says Janet Hyde, a professor of psychology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. "We looked at 184 studies, representing the testing of 1.6 million students in grades K-12 from 21 nations, for outcomes related to science and mathematics performance, educational attitudes and aspirations, self-concept and gender stereotyping," says Hyde. "From these, we selected 57 studies that corrected for factors like parental education and economics, which are known to benefit children's school performance." The study, published in the online Psychological Bulletin Feb. 3, used an analytical technique called meta-analysis, which draws conclusions from multiple studies of an issue. "We are trying to shed some light by putting together studies that applied different methods to different populations," says Hyde. "If you do this right, the whole becomes greater than the sum of its parts." Hyde's co-authors were Erin Pahlke, who was a postdoctoral fellow at UW-Madison and is now teaching at Whitman College in Washington State, and Carlie Allison, who was a graduate student in psychology. According to one estimate, thousands of U.S. public schools offered single-sex academic classes during the 2009-10 school year. As school districts ponder decisions to adopt or suspend single-sex schooling, the scientific literature offers conflicting advice, Hyde says. "The problem is that there are lots of really poor quality studies, but also lots of really good ones, and they've never been separated out before. Especially in the United States, parents who choose single-sex schooling, on average, have more money and more education, which all predict performance. So if you find that the students are performing better, you don't know if it's due to the single sex education or the fact that they started out with these advantages." Many of the studies focused on math and science, Hyde says. "One claim of single-sex schooling advocates is that, for girls, it will improve math-science performance because they are not mixed with boys who, it's claimed, dominate the classroom. But there is not any advantage, if you look at the controlled studies." Other assertions made by advocates of single-sex schooling were also unsupported, Hyde says. "The claim that boys do better verbally in single-sex schooling, because they get squelched in a coed setting, did not hold up. And the claim has been made that girls will develop a better self-concept, but again there is no evidence for that." Data was scarce regarding one disputed area: possible benefits for minority boys, Hyde says. "There has been some thinking that this would help ethnic minority boys, but we did not find enough studies covering that topic. We urgently need high-quality study of these programs that make careful comparisons with coed schooling, comparing students with equal resources, to see if the single-sex configuration really makes a difference." If single-sex schooling does not have demonstrable benefits, it does have downsides, Hyde says. "There is a mountain of research in social psychology showing that segregation by race or gender feeds stereotypes, and that's not what we want. The adult world is an integrated world, in the workplace and in the family, and the best thing we can do is provide that environment for children in school as we prepare them for adulthood." On a practical level, Hyde adds that single-sex schooling is "terrifically difficult and expensive. If you have a single-sex 8th grade math class for girls, you need another for boys, and a third that's coed. Public schools have better places to put their money." The study has other policy implications, Hyde says. "Federal regulations permit single-sex schooling in public schools only if there is a compelling educational interest. The kids would have to perform better and the evidence does not show that they do."

By mcollins

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Should Public Taxpayers Pay for Discrimination?

Why Milwaukee Public Schools should not sell Malcolm X to St. Marcus

By mcollins

Download ACLU of Wisconsin Milwaukee and Madison bust cards with local resources

Our bust cards are pocket references on what to do during encounters with the police.

By editor

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ACLU to State Senator: No School Voucher Expansion

 

By mcollins

Another High School Rejects Stereotypes and Returns to Coeducation

By Allie Bohm, Advocacy & Policy Strategist

By mcollins

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ACLU of Wisconsin Biennial Education Survey

The ACLU of Wisconsin is conducting its Biannual Education Survey, and has sent open records requests to 107 of the 425 school districts in Wisconsin to see how they are doing on some of the ACLU’s priority issues: nondiscrimination, bullying, and the right of each student to an adequate education.

By editor

Sex Segregation Won’t Fix the Racial Achievement Gap in Madison: Letter Issued to School District Outlines Concerns over Legality of Sex-Segregated Charter School Proposal

The American Civil Liberties Union of Wisconsin continues to oppose sex segregation in a proposal for a charter school that will be considered by the Madison Metropolitan School District later this month. This week, the ACLU issued a letter to the school board outlining its concerns with the research and legal justifications for single-sex education in the Madison Preparatory Academy plan. The ACLU agrees that students of color in Madison deserve better educational options. However, as coeducation is not the cause of the racial achievement gap, it isn’t a reasonable solution. There is too great a potential for discrimination in sex-segregation. Research cited in the proposal in support of single-gender education are unscientific, biased or don’t actually conclude that sex segregation alone is what contributes to student success. What has been proven in academic studies and journals is that these programs reinforce harmful gender stereotypes and perpetuate the discredited idea that boys and girls learn so differently that they shouldn’t be educated in the same classroom.

By editor

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