Donate
Email Password
Not a member? Sign Up   Forgot password?
Business and Economics Education Environment Health Care California
Home
About PRI
My PRI
Contact
Search
Policy Research Areas
Events
Publications
Press Room
PRI Blog
Jobs Internships
Scholars
Staff
Book Store
Policy Cast
Upcoming Events
There are no upcoming events at this time
Recent Events
Obama's Education Takeover
2.8.2012 6:00:00 PM

Lance T. Izumi, Koret Senior Fellow and PRI's Senior ... More

Health Care Reform: A Different Path - Current Federal Plan May Be Bad For Your Health
2.2.2012 11:30:00 AM
The Orange County Forum presents a luncheon and reception with ... More

Cocktail Reception—Celebrate the Book Release of The Pipes Plan: The Top Ten Ways to Dismantle and Replace ObamaCare
1.26.2012 5:30:00 PM

Celebrate the Release of Sally C. Pipes’ New Book ... More

Opinion Journal Federation
Town Hall silver partner
Lawsuit abuse victims project
Blog RSS Archive
E-mail Print Education-as-Usual Costing U.S. Economy $Trillions


By: Vicki E. Murray, Ph.D
1.27.2010

On the heels of President Obama's pledge to freeze non-defense discretionary spending comes even more evidence that resources for schooling don't equal reform of schooling. Quality time with great teachers, not quantity time with ineffective ones, is what distinguishes economic winners and losers, according to a new report from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Compared to their peers in 29 other countries, American 15-year olds place 21st in science literacy (see p. 6), and 25th in math literacy (see p. 12) according to the latest Program for International Student Assessment (PISA).

 

Focusing on education outcomes such as students' skills instead of "education-as-usual" inputs like more money and more seat time could translate into trillions more dollars for the U.S. economy. According to OECD, raising American students' PISA scores 25 points to the level of their peers in the United Kingdom and Germany could grow US GDP $41 trillion over the course of those students' lifetimes. If scores were on par with top-performing Finland, 58 points higher, US GDP could grow more than $100 trillion. Study author Eric Hanushek explains, "Money is not a predictor of success in systems." Replacing ineffective teachers is-even average replacements could make a huge difference. Replacing 2 percent of ineffective teachers gets the U.S. on par with the UK and Germany. Replace 10 percent of ineffective teachers, and "we can beat Finland."


This blog post originally appeared on Independent Women's Forum Inkwell.

 


 

Submit to: 
Submit to: Digg Submit to: Del.icio.us Submit to: Facebook Submit to: StumbleUpon Submit to: Newsvine Submit to: Reddit
Browse by
Recent Publications
Blog Archive
Powered by eResources