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Foundations for Success

Policy Framework

Big-city school districts play a critical role in educating America’s children. Although there are almost 17,000 public school districts in the United States, just 100 of them serve 23 percent of all students, 30 percent of economically disadvantaged students, and 40 percent of students from racial minorities. It is in the big cities that the challenges facing the education system — low achievement, political conflict, inexperienced teachers, and high student mobility — are most pronounced. Thus, every debate about testing, accountability, busing, vouchers, social promotion, class size, and achievement gaps among children from different racial and economic backgrounds is in large part a debate about urban public education.

An increasing number of cities are tackling education reform on a district-wide rather than a school-by-school basis. Though much research and discussion has been devoted to the question of what makes an effective school, relatively little is known about what makes an effective district, about whether district-level changes can affect the performance of individual schools, and about the connection between central office policies and teaching and learning in the classroom. The Foundations for Success study helps fill this knowledge gap by suggesting hypotheses about possible sources of success in urban districts that have managed not only to raise student achievement overall but also to shrink racial and economic disparities in achievement levels.

Agenda, Scope, and Goals

The Foundations for Success study focuses on the role of school districts in initiating and sustaining academic improvement in inner-city schools. Conducted by MDRC for The Council of the Great City Schools, the study addressed four main questions:

  • What was the historical, administrative, and programmatic context within which student performance improved in districts that both raised achievement and narrowed the achievement gap?

  • What was the nature of the changes in student achievement that took place (for example, did they pertain only to certain schools or subgroups of students)?

  • What district-level strategies were used to improve student achievement and reduce racial disparities?

  • What was the connection between policies, practices, and strategies at the district levels and changes in teaching and learning in the classroom?

Design, Sites, and Data Sources

To answer these questions, MDRC looked at three urban school districts and a portion of a fourth that were identified by an external advisory group as having improved academic performance and reduced racial disparities in student achievement. These districts are:
  • the Charlotte-Mecklenburg (North Carolina) School District
  • the Houston Independent School District
  • the Sacramento City Unified School District
  • the Chancellor’s District in New York City
MDRC conducted case studies in these districts and in two comparison districts where outcomes had not improved. During the course of site visits to the districts, MDRC staff interviewed and conducted focus groups with administrators and teachers, as well as reviewed district documents and student test scores.

The research was designed to be exploratory, and its findings are best seen as hypotheses about promising district-level practices that warrant broader systematic testing.

What's Next

MDRC is working to develop future demonstration projects that will rigorously test the hypotheses arising from the Foundations for Success.

Featured Publication

Foundations for Success
Case Studies of How Urban School Systems Improve Student Achievement


Video Presentation

Closing the Education Achievement Gap
Drawing from an exploratory investigation of successful districtwide school reforms, this five-minute video outlines how public school systems in four big cities reduced ethnic and racial disparities in academic achievement while raising student performance overall.
QuickTime version


Presentation

Improving Student Achievement in Urban School Districts
A Case Study of School Reform in Large Urban School Systems

A Case Study of School Reform in Large Urban School Systems

Funders

U.S. Department of Education

Ford Foundation

Council of the Great City Schools



Partner

The Council of the Great City Schools

 

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