91制片厂视频

Opinion
School & District Management Opinion

Innovative Reforms Require Innovative Scorekeeping

By Lisbeth B. Schorr 鈥 August 25, 2009 6 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print
Email Copy URL

President Barack Obama has made clear that we must systematically identify 鈥渨hat works,鈥 both for budgetary reasons and to ensure that public money supports effective social programs and policies. The president and his budget chief recognize how tricky it is to make that determination. In June, Office of Management and Budget Director Peter Orszag describing how the administration will make sure that spending decisions are based not only on good intentions but also on strong evidence.

No single, circumscribed program can turn things around in an entire community or for a whole population. Nor can complex social programs and policies be tested like new drugs.

Serious social reformers today agree that rigorous efforts to determine 鈥渨hat works鈥 are essential. But, depending on what the administration considers 鈥渟trong evidence,鈥 these efforts risk sabotaging or marginalizing some of the most innovative attempts to solve intractable social problems. I worry that, in defining what constitutes 鈥渢he best available evidence鈥 of effectiveness, the OMB and federal agencies will follow the constricted approach of the Coalition for Evidence-Based Policy and the U.S. Department of 91制片厂视频鈥檚 What Works Clearinghouse. These and similar organizations claim scientific rigor by insisting that public and philanthropic support go only to programs shown to be evidence-based through experimental evaluation methods, preferably involving random assignment of participants to experimental and control groups. The implication is that this methodology can determine definitively and objectively, uncontaminated by human judgment, whether any intervention鈥攂e it a pill, a model program, or an ambitious institutional change鈥攑roduces a different outcome than would otherwise occur.

Unfortunately, no single, circumscribed program can turn things around in an entire community or for a whole population. Nor can complex social programs and policies be tested like new drugs. The interventions that turn around inner-city schools, strengthen families, and rebuild neighborhoods are not stable chemicals manufactured and administered in standardized doses. They are sprawling efforts with multiple components, some of which may be proven experimentally, but many that can鈥檛 be because they require midcourse corrections and adaptations to fit local circumstances.

Reformers in virtually every domain鈥攆rom education to human services and social policy鈥攈ave been learning that the most promising strategies are likely to be complex and highly dependent on their social, physical, and policy context. Very few efforts to improve education for at-risk students, prevent child abuse, increase labor-market participation, or reduce teenage pregnancy or homelessness succeed by applying a single, bounded intervention. They depend on community capacity to take elements that have worked somewhere already, adapt them, and reconfigure them with other strategies emerging from research, experience, and theory to make a coherent whole.

The search for silver bullets is giving way to an understanding that, to make inroads on big social problems, reformers must mobilize multiple, interacting strategies that take account not only of individual needs but also of the power of context. President Obama we stop treating unemployment, violence, failing schools, and broken homes in isolation and put together what works 鈥渢o heal that entire community.鈥 That鈥檚 the thinking behind the president鈥檚 proposed Promise Neighborhoods initiative, inspired by the accomplishments of the .

What is remarkable about the collection of activities that the Harlem program comprises, and what has captured the attention of funders, reformers, and politicians, is that they build on one another; each is shaped to add to and multiply the impact of the others. Theory and experience suggest that the long-term results of these coherent efforts will ultimately be a critical mass of engaged, nurturing families, well-educated students, community values that support education and responsibility, and an infrastructure to sustain results that cannot be achieved by isolated programs aimed only at individuals.

The trouble is that scaling up such collections of reforms is hard, and determining what, exactly, works is even harder.

In assessing the success of complex, interactive efforts to improve outcomes, experimental methods cannot be the sole arbiter of effectiveness.

As a family-support program in King County, Wash., has discovered, the 鈥渞igid, narrow accountability鈥 that funders demand forces programs to 鈥渒eep doing only what worked yesterday, instead of what works today.鈥 , it found that the very qualities that make the program effective are the qualities that make measurement so difficult.

The obstacles to demonstrating effectiveness, which become even more formidable in moving beyond the programmatic, are best overcome with a clear focus on results.

In the 1990s, the state of Vermont established state-local partnerships so people in all domains could do everything likely to contribute to school readiness. Their focus on results encouraged innovation and local problem-solving and replaced rigid regulation of inputs with rigorous accountability for accomplishments.

Vermont leaders knew they would never be able to prove that each piece of what the partnerships did was effective, but they were able to show that the entire strategy dramatically improved lives. Trend lines that had shown increasing damage in the form of child abuse, infant mortality, school failure, and teenage pregnancy began to turn around and move in the right direction soon after the partnerships instituted policies targeting those outcomes.

The evidence came from timing (the curves began to turn in communities where the interventions were initially implemented, and then in the whole state as the interventions went statewide); from theoretical connections established by research (for example, that high-quality supports to young families can reduce child abuse and changed community norms can reduce teenage pregnancy); and from the accumulation of data (including practitioner observations and official data from hospitals, health departments, and schools).

Had the Vermont partnerships been limited to 鈥減roven鈥 interventions, or had they tried to set up interventions as randomized experiments, they would have had neither the money nor the flexibility to provide the services that made such a remarkable difference for the state鈥檚 children and families.

When an orientation toward results pervades planning, management, and implementation of new initiatives, it is easier to meet the challenges of accountability and evaluation. Evaluation becomes a way to support rigorous, contemporaneous collection of data on progress toward clearly defined goals, rather than an after-the-fact assessment of what succeeded (or didn鈥檛).

Experimental methods are not always the best or even most 'scientific' way to obtain credible evidence.

Developers of complex social reforms aren鈥檛 the only ones who find that experimental methods are not always the best or even most 鈥渟cientific鈥 way to obtain credible evidence. Calls to re-examine what constitutes credible evidence come even from medicine. The Roundtable on Evidence-Based Medicine of the federal Institute of Medicine recommends that randomized clinical trials should not continue to be considered the gold standard, as they seem useful only in limited circumstances, including a narrow range of illnesses and the absence of multiple problems in an individual patient.

Many education researchers have reached a similar conclusion. In the American 91制片厂视频al Research Association鈥檚 Handbook of 91制片厂视频 Policy Research, David L. Weimer suggests that 鈥渢he typical evaluation model focuses attention on one or a small number of policy impacts with unambiguous desirability, and only assesses policies already in place.鈥 He points out that truly novel ideas cannot be assessed within this model because they have yet to produce data that can be used to measure impacts.

Policymakers radically diminish the potential of reforms if they allow themselves to be bullied into accepting impoverished definitions of credible evidence. Just as the Obama administration is on the cutting edge of reform by recognizing the importance of complexity in many arenas of social policy, so must it encourage innovation in efforts to determine 鈥渨hat works.鈥

Related Tags:

A version of this article appeared in the August 26, 2009 edition of 91制片厂视频 Week

Events

Recruitment & Retention Webinar Keep Talented Teachers and Improve Student Outcomes
Keep talented teachers and unlock student success with strategic planning based on insights from Apple 91制片厂视频 and educational leaders.鈥
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of 91制片厂视频 Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Families & the Community Webinar
Family Engagement: The Foundation for a Strong School Year
Learn how family engagement promotes student success with insights from National PTA, AASA鈥痑nd leading districts and schools.鈥
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of 91制片厂视频 Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Special 91制片厂视频 Webinar
How Early Adopters of Remote Therapy are Improving IEPs
Learn how schools are using remote therapy to improve IEP compliance & scalability while delivering outcomes comparable to onsite providers.
Content provided by 

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide 鈥 elementary, middle, high school and more.
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.

Read Next

School & District Management Video Tour a School Built to Stay Open in Extreme Weather
River Grove Elementary is built to stay open, with the lights on, as extreme weather strikes.
2 min read
School & District Management Opinion From One Superintendent to Another: Get Political
Strong relationships with political leaders help create a supportive network for your schools, even amid partisan turbulence.
George Philhower
5 min read
Vector of an education leader hand holding a book bridging the gap in education for a group of political people walking on
Feodora Chiosea/iStock
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of 91制片厂视频 Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
School & District Management Whitepaper
Courageous 91制片厂视频 Makes Literacy Change Happen
Get your blueprint for sustainable change and get ready to 鈥渕ake it happen.鈥
Content provided by 95 Percent Group
School & District Management Q&A What Should School Administrators Wear to Work? A Superintendent鈥檚 Style Tips
Melanie Kay-Wyatt describes her wardrobe as professional, comfortable, and colorful.
3 min read
Melanie Kay-Wyatt stands for a portrait inside Alexandria City High School on Sept. 9, 2024 in Alexandria, Va. Kay-Wyatt serves as superintendent for Alexandria City Public Schools.
Melanie Kay-Wyatt, the superintendent for the Alexandria, Va., school district, stands for a portrait inside Alexandria City High School on Sept. 9, 2024. She considers her professional style to be an important part of how she presents herself in her role.
Maansi Srivastava for 91制片厂视频 Week