Future Retirement Success
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Investing
  • Stocks
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Investing
  • Stocks

Future Retirement Success

Investing

Depicting K-12 Productivity, Continued

by April 14, 2025
April 14, 2025
Depicting K-12 Productivity, Continued

Neal McCluskey

Last month I wrote about creating an updated K‑12 productivity chart. The difficulty of any chart is balancing ease of understanding with accuracy and nuance, and that applies here.

A major concern with the trial chart I produced was complication. It was not intuitive, especially using outcomes of high school seniors surpassing certain performance benchmarks. The goal was to have roughly comparable spending and outcome measures—percentage change in spending versus percentage point change in student performance. The primary source of confusion is that the “main” National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) exam, which was added to extend the performance trend from 2012 to 2019, has a “proficiency” benchmark, but the long-term trend (LTT) exam does not. 

I used the change in the percent of students scoring “proficient” or above to demonstrate progress on the main NAEP, and passing the middle cut-score on the NAEP reporting table for the LTT. But that score could seem arbitrary (also, it is actually the second-highest cut-score overall). The NAEP does have descriptions of the benchmarks, but those would be difficult to explain on the chart.

A simpler version of that chart can be seen next, still using students surpassing cut scores, but with spending and scores compared to a base year, which varies for each trend because some tests were first administered later or earlier than others.

To remedy the benchmark problem, next is essentially the original productivity chart that ended in 2012, except rather than using inflation-adjusted total funding for a high school senior’s K‑12 career, it plots percentage change in NAEP scale scores against percentage change in inflation-adjusted per-pupil spending, and adds main NAEP scores to extend the trend to 2019. 

The problem is that a percentage change in a scale score has indeterminate meaning; a small percentage change could indicate small or large learning increases. That said, as a rule of thumb, a year of learning is equal to about 10 scale score points. This is itself controversial, but using it, the 6‑point scale-score increase from the baseline of 300 on LTT math is a 2 percent rise between the first administration in 1978 and the last in 2012, suggesting 17-year-olds had 3.6 more months’ worth of learning in the last year versus the first, assuming a 180-day school year. 

Was that a good return coinciding with a 76 percent increase in inflation-adjusted per-pupil spending—from $8,879 to $15,588? That’s a judgment call.

While the ways of presenting the productivity evidence have meaningful differences, the ultimate story seems to be the same. For high school seniors—essentially our education system’s “final” products”—outcomes in reading have been stagnant or falling. In math, they rose until 2012 but largely stagnated after, while spending has ballooned.

Of course, as bears constant repeating, NAEP—and standardized testing generally—likely does not capture nearly all that people think education should be about. Meanwhile, numerous variables impact NAEP scores beyond spending, which is one reason a version of the chart (see below) includes a line for changing GDP; other things equal, an increase in material well-being should foster an increase in academic outcomes.

In the end, life is complicated, so any chart should be taken as just one piece of evidence in analyzing broad educational outcomes.

0
FacebookTwitterGoogle +Pinterest
previous post
DP Trading Room: SPX Earnings Update
next post
Pete Marocco, mastermind behind dismantling of USAID projects, leaves State Department

You may also like

Biden’s SAVE versus Current Income-Driven Repayment: Grad School...

August 22, 2023

Dollarization’s Critics Are Ignoring the Evidence

September 12, 2023

Utah’s Fluoride Ban: A Win for Medical Autonomy

March 12, 2025

Taiwan’s Officials Should Not be Complacent on Arms...

November 22, 2023

Gender Board Quotas: Still Unhelpful to Working Women

September 7, 2023

Friday Feature: Chesapeake Bay Academy

May 16, 2025

The Downsides of Ban-the-Box Laws

July 29, 2024

The GOP’s Modest Debt Limit Proposal

April 25, 2023

Regulation Is Europe’s Key Leverage in Global Tech...

July 9, 2024

The End of Net Neutrality

January 7, 2025

    Get free access to all of the retirement secrets and income strategies from our experts! or Join The Exclusive Subscription Today And Get the Premium Articles Acess for Free

    By opting in you agree to receive emails from us and our affiliates. Your information is secure and your privacy is protected.

    Recent Posts

    • Trump, lawmakers react after ‘big, beautiful bill’ clears Senate hurdle

      June 29, 2025
    • How Staff Can Strengthen HIPAA Compliance and Security

      June 29, 2025
    • Lotus denies plans to close Hethel factory amid US expansion talks

      June 29, 2025
    • Top university degrees lose sway as tech employers prioritise job-ready skills

      June 29, 2025
    • Government urges supermarkets to make healthy food more appealing in bid to tackle obesity crisis

      June 29, 2025
    • Senate Republicans ram Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ through key test vote

      June 29, 2025

    Categories

    • Business (8,334)
    • Investing (2,081)
    • Politics (15,854)
    • Stocks (3,177)
    • About us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Disclaimer: futureretirementsuccess.com, its managers, its employees, and assigns (collectively “The Company”) do not make any guarantee or warranty about what is advertised above. Information provided by this website is for research purposes only and should not be considered as personalized financial advice. The Company is not affiliated with, nor does it receive compensation from, any specific security. The Company is not registered or licensed by any governing body in any jurisdiction to give investing advice or provide investment recommendation. Any investments recommended here should be taken into consideration only after consulting with your investment advisor and after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company.

    Copyright © 2025 futureretirementsuccess.com | All Rights Reserved