Policy Digest

Education
May, 1996

Dollars And Scholars

The U.S. trails other industrialized countries in teaching reading skills, despite the fact that we spend far more per-pupil than they. Experts say this leaves us with the booby prize in the efficiency department.

Surveys show that the preschool language mastery of American children has increased steadily and substantially over the years. But once children begin formal schooling, U.S. students actually make the least reading progress among students in 16 industrialized countries.

The latest data come from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development:

Yet the U.S. spends the most per child in public primary school of the 13 nations in the study for which cost data are available.

Those who have studied the matter say that the problem lies in the way we compensate teachers. Here, they are not paid for performance, but according to their degrees and years of experience -- neither of which consistently correlates with student gains.

Superintendents, administrators and principals are paid according to the numbers and salaries of those who report to them. Experts say these policies are incentives only to multiply the number of administrative staff, and to hire and retain teachers irrespective of merit.

Nothing short of changing this structure fundamentally -- probably through school vouchers and other forms of privatization -- will generate the efficiency gains needed to bring U.S. schools up to world standards.

Source: Herbert J. Walberg (University of Illinois at Chicago) and Joseph L. Bast (Heartland Institute), "The World's Least Efficient Schools," Investor's Business Daily, May 23, 1996.


Home | Support Us | All Issues | Social Security | Debate Central | Contact Us

Dallas Headquarters: 12770 Coit Rd., Suite 800 - Dallas, TX 75251-1339 - 972/386-6272 - Fax 972/386-0924
Washington Office: 601 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Suite 900 South Building, Washington, DC 20004 - 202/220-3082 - Fax 202/220-3096
© 2001 NCPA