This release was originally issued by the Hoover Institution. For more information about the Task Force Report, contact: Michele Horaney or Caleb Offley, Hoover Public Affairs, (650) 723-0603 (offley@Hoover.stanford.edu)
Stanford, Calif., March 12, 2003 — Twenty years after the landmark report A Nation at Risk, American K-12 education remains mired in mediocrity and will require enormous changes at its core in order to become more effective, according to a new report by the Koret Task Force on K-12 Education.
Since the 1983 report by the National Commission on Excellence in Education, which warned of a "rising tide of mediocrity," public education has not risen to the challenges it outlined.
The time has come to institute a new system based on the principles of accountability, transparency, and choice, according to the Koret Task Force, a group of scholars sponsored by the Koret Foundation and based at the Hoover Institution.
"A Nation at Risk provided the nation with a much-needed wake-up call, but its recommendations proved too timid to catalyze great leaps in educational performance," said Harvard political scientist and Koret Task Force member Paul Peterson, who edited the new volume Our Schools and Our Future… Are We Still at Risk? The book is published by Hoover Institution Press.
With the approach of A Nation at Risk's 20th anniversary, Hoover's Koret Task Force on K-12 Education came together to study the nation's response to the challenge laid down in 1983.
In addition to Peterson, members of the task force are John E. Chubb, Williamson M. Evers, Chester E. Finn Jr., Eric A. Hanushek, Paul T. Hill, E. D. Hirsch Jr., Caroline Hoxby, Terry M. Moe, Diane Ravitch, and Herbert J. Walberg.
"The Task Force not only offers an assessment of the past 20 years, but also brings its intellectual capital to bear on the entire issue," said Hoover director John Raisian. "The Task Force endorses the emphasis placed on greater accountability and transparency in American education, as contained in No Child Left Behind. It also urges that accountability laws be supplemented to give parents greater choice among schools. These are serious and remarkable findings and recommendations."
The 11-member task force of nationally known scholars found that few of the recommendations made by the National Commission on Excellence in Education report were properly implemented.
And despite many earnest reform efforts and steadily climbing school expenditures, there is little evidence that students are learning more.
A Nation at Risk called for higher standards for teachers as well as students. It also urged that more time be spent on learning. Yet the Koret Task Force finds that the situation has actually worsened over the past twenty years:
As a result, the Koret Task Force points out that student achievement has remained mostly flat for the past several decades.
Gains have been negligible, the Task Force says, despite massive increases in resources poured into the country's schools.
The Hoover/Koret scholars point out that the annual cost to the nation of the educational stagnation of the past 20 years is enormous. Task Force member Eric Hanushek estimates that it exceeds $450 billion, enough to cover the entire cost of our public elementary and secondary education system. He adds that the economic growth that the U.S. has enjoyed in recent decades cannot be explained by any improvement in the quality of our K-12 educational system. Indeed, even more growth could have been enjoyed had the nation's schools effectively carried out the mandate given to them in A Nation at Risk.
The Excellence Commission sought to work within the existing system, proposing reforms that states and school districts could act upon immediately — and trusted them to do so.
"We now know," Task Force members write, "that this was unrealistic, that the Commission failed to confront essential issues of power and control."