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Rick Perry's Education Policies Bring Mixed Results In Texas

First Posted: 08/22/2011 4:04 pm Updated: 03/ 9/2012 3:29 pm

Texas Gov. Rick Perry's k-12 education record has become the Obama administration's newest piñata -- but the administration's attacks mostly paint Perry's education policies in half-true generalizations and miss some real contradictions.

The criticism began Thursday, when U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan unloaded on the newest GOP presidential contender, telling Bloomberg Television that he felt "very, very badly" for Texas school children. "Texas may have the lowest high school graduation rate in the country," Duncan asserted.

Over the weekend, Robert Gibbs, a former White House press secretary and current outside administration advisor, piled on: "I think when it comes to someone like Rick Perry, they're [voters] going to wonder why a place like Texas has one of the worst education systems," Gibbs said on Sunday's "Meet the Press."

But Texas's educational achievement record is more complex than Gibbs and Duncan make it sound, and their claims depend on carefully-chosen data.

On one hand, math scores on the National Assessment of Education Progress test have increased, and Texas students have performed relatively well under Perry's watch -- though progress has stalled recently. On the other hand, NAEP reading scores are relatively low, and Texas leads the country in the number of adults without high school diplomas. And while Texans scored slightly below the national average on the 2011 ACT, few of those students are college-ready.

When asked for clarification on what Duncan meant by saying Texas "may have" the nation's lowest graduation rate, a spokeswoman said she could not comment further. Texas's technical graduation rate may indeed be the nation's lowest, but that figure includes students of all ages who have not completed high school. The state's freshman completion rate is average, and Texas ranked seventh out of the 26 states that reported their four-year on-time graduation rates for 2009.

"Texas is mid-pack on graduation rates, and that's no great shakes," said Andy Rotherham, a former Clinton policy aide who now works as a partner at the think tank Bellwether Education Partners. "The bigger story is that Perry hasn't done anything on education."

WHAT POLICY?

Under Perry's watch, Texas's curriculum wars made national headlines with stories about the state's conservative school board arguing over textbook content. Perry himself received attention late last week for saying intelligent design is taught alongside evolution in Texas public schools. That statement flew in the face of a 1987 state Supreme Court ruling prohibiting the practice. Still, Perry's gaffe was more a statement on values than an education policy pronouncement.

While Perry has condemned the federal government's role in public schools, he does not seem to have a highly-articulated education policy of his own. His campaign website does not list education as an issue. Members of his staff did not return requests for comment.

Perry's gubernatorial website points to several small initiatives: teacher incentive pay, school supply reimbursement, teacher mentoring and increasing standards. But Texas education leaders say they wish Perry had articulated broader education positions.

"I couldn't point out a signature education policy but I give [Perry] credit for letting things play out over time and letting them get better," said Michael Marder, a professor at the University of Texas who runs a teacher preparation program that receives state funds. A lack of coherent education policy is inconsequential, he says, as long as the numbers are relatively good.

Ed Fuller, a long-time Texas education researcher, is less charitable. "If [Perry]'s going to run around claiming that he's done something good, the numbers don't show it," Fuller said. "Fourth grade math flattened out; we're not making improvements -- it's taking a while to translate into the eighth grade."

"He's done nothing," said Linda Bridges, who heads Texas's arm of the American Federation of Teachers.

JUMPING OFF THE FUNDING CLIFF

Budget cuts may end up the education legacy of Perry's governorship; Texas education observers predict that the school system is about to fall off the edge of a funding cliff.

During a special session to reform school funding in 2005, Perry said, "I cannot let $2 billion sit in some bank account when it can go directly to the classroom," according to his website. But the governor had no problem underfunding Texas's schools by $5.5 billion this legislative session, despite access to a $9.4 billion rainy-day fund. That move, some education advocates say, threatens to foil the subtle gains Texas students have made in recent years.

And while Perry touts job creation on the campaign trail, thousands of Texas education employees stand ready to lose their jobs because of the cuts.

The worst is yet to come, says Eva DeLuna Castro, a senior budget analyst at Texas's Center for Public Policy Priorities. Her think tank predicts a loss of 49,000 education jobs over the next two years.

"Federal stimulus money softened the blow this year," she said. "Next August will be worse. There will be cuts to dropout prevention, teacher pay, incentive pay, math and science labs and grants for pre-K. A lot of education initiatives done in earlier years will be gone now."

Texas now ranks 47th nationally in what it pays for each student's education. "[Perry's] goal is to make Texas the 99-cent store of states," said Scott Hochberg, a Democratic state representative. "You're going for cheap."

It's about to get cheaper. The state swapped its heavy reliance on property taxes for a new business tax in 2006, despite the Republican comptroller's warning that the flip would lead to a budget shortfall. Since then, Texas school funding -- and the state budget in general -- has been unsteady.

This budget session, the legislature responded to pressure from Perry and did not fund enrollment growth in schools, despite an increase of 80,000 students. According to Democratic state Sen. Kirk Watson, "[Perry] did this almost single-handedly, blocking the disuse of the rainy day fund with veto threats."

According to Bloomberg News, "Perry cut $15 billion from spending [over time] and shortchanged [students] by about $4 billion from previously mandated levels rather than raise taxes."

To Cody Wheeler, a music teacher at a Louis Elementary School in Houston, Perry's education policies will be apparent for the incoming class. Last year he had 26 students, but budget cuts have forced his district to lay off some teachers. "This year, I'm going to have a class of 35 kindergartners every day," Wheeler said. "That'll be pretty challenging."

FAVORING FEDERALISM

Perry has been called the anti-Obama of education policy more than once. But he's also the anti-George W. Bush in some ways.

Bush, Perry's predecessor in Texas, made education a major issue while leading both the state and, later, the country.

"Governor Bush was making public education a priority," said Hochberg. "Perry's education initiatives in k-12 have been limited to things like announcing that he was going to provide some teachers help to buy school supplies to their classrooms and then never funding it."

With Bush as president, Congress passed No Child Left Behind, the sweeping federal education law that requires accountability and test reporting among school districts and ties federal education funding to set performance standards.

Perry attacked NCLB in his book, "Fed Up! Our Fight to Save America from Washington," in a chapter titled "Federal Intervention in Education":

[J]ust like the spending hook used to induce compliance for seat-belt and drinking-age laws, the federal government reaches into our pockets, takes out wads of dollars, and then says that we can have them back only if we comply with federal instructions.

Perry also showed his states' rights principles in his resistance to participating in
Obama's Race to the Top, a grant program that had states compete for federal education funding in exchange for agreeing to implement adminstration-sanctioned reforms. "Texas knows how to best educate our students," Perry said.

He echoed that that point in "Fed Up," writing, "The academic standards of Texas are not for sale. We will retain our sovereign authority to decide how to educate our children."

But critics say Perry's funding decisions undermine any boasts of enhancing student learning. Instead, Texas kids are coming of age in an under-resourced school system that might be unable to prepare them to enter the workforce.

"If students are in underfunded schools, they'll never get ahead," DeLuna Castro said. "When they grow up, they'll be unable to pay taxes, too. It's a cycle. You've got to prepare them for that."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST EDUCATION

Texas Gov. Rick Perry's k-12 education record has become the Obama administration's newest piñata -- but the administration's attacks mostly paint Perry's education policies in half-true generalizati...
Texas Gov. Rick Perry's k-12 education record has become the Obama administration's newest piñata -- but the administration's attacks mostly paint Perry's education policies in half-true generalizati...
 
 
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
TXfemmom 03:21 PM on 08/22/2011
They did not even mention the effects he has had on the college level.  He and his buddies cut the money going to colleges and universities ruthlessly, and then gave the schools the ability to increase tuition at will, and they have done just that.  The rates of increases for college and university tuition under Perry have increased at three to four times the rate of inflation.  They  Read More...
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quillerm
12:22 PM on 09/03/2011
Since 25% of school students in Texas are children of Illegals and English is a second language, has the author of this OPED taken that in consideration when compiling these negative statistics?
08:04 PM on 09/05/2011
Wow, I had no idea that 7.5 students in each of my classes were illegals. That is a total of about 52 students that are illegals in my classes alone, or about 250 out of our 1000 students total. Where do you get your data?
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12:25 PM on 08/27/2011
Education in Texas is horrific. As a Texan I cannot believe that anyone would support Perry, but then again I can (it all boils down to the religious-right). There are young teenage girls pregnant everywhere! I believe that Texas has one of the highest teenage pregnancy rates. Many of these young girls have been married and divorced more than twice and are younger than myself (I'm 25 btw). Sex education is no longer taught in health class... when I was growing up I had a proper sex education course. The high school drop out rate is ridiculous and students attend community college for five years and beyond. It is just a sad situation. Children are the future and quite frankly that scares me!
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quillerm
12:24 PM on 09/03/2011
Are you aware that 25% of Texas students are children of Illegal Immigrants and English is their second language.
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01:53 PM on 09/03/2011
What do illegal immigrants have to do with the horrific state of education in Texas? Very little! I'm not sure if you know this or not, but there are other races of people that reside in Texas. The education problems are not only in heavily concentrated Hispanic towns, but it white suburbia as well. Students of all races are failing to meet TAKS standards and will likely fail to meet the new STARS standards too.
11:37 PM on 08/26/2011
Check out this article about the new Texas social studies curriculum. Insanity!

http://www.statesman.com/opinion/history-whose-story-texas-gives-lesson-in-revision-1780554.html?fb_ref=homepage
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Reasongal
12:19 PM on 08/26/2011
I followed a link to foxbusiness.com for an article on the states with the lowest educational requirements. Look at what I found:

"Texas
Grade 4 reading: 188 (11th lowest)
Grade 4 math: 214 (11th lowest)
Grade 8 reading: 201 (lowest)
Grade 8 math: 254 (10th lowest)

Texas has set the lowest bar for 8th grade reading proficiency in the country. The state is in the bottom 20 states for national math scores, although it scores significantly higher than last place. According to the Houston Business Journal, 2,233 of 7,830 schools, or 29%, did not meet the national AYP requirements during the 2010-2011 school year. Duncan recently stated on Bloomberg Television that he believes the state’s education system is suffering. “Far too few of their high school graduates are actually prepared to go on to college,” he said, adding that he feels “very, very badly for the children there.”

Read more: http://www.foxbusiness.com/personal-finance/2011/08/24/states-that-expect-least-their-students/#ixzz1W9PWcWiD
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quillerm
12:25 PM on 09/03/2011
Have the statistics been adjusted to account for 25% of the students being children of Illegal Immigrants?
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Reasongal
01:58 PM on 09/03/2011
I don't know if or how that is determined in school. In New Mexico we have both legal and illegal immigrants - many can speak English well, but need skills improvement in the second language. Many, if they have been in school in Mexico, have excellent math skills. Arizona is also a border state. I would like to know if that percentage of illegal immigrants has been established as enrolled in school, as opposed to hispanic students in general. If you have a source, I would certainly look at it. I don't believe illegal immigrants can be scapegoated ethically for every issue Texas has. It use to be blacks in the South, and society members in difficult straits tend to seek out a scapegoat for all ills, so it would need to be documented and the students' skill sets established.
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foerschnerr
It's easier to do things right the first time.
10:30 AM on 08/24/2011
When it comes to education in Texas, Perry's expertise is out there. Way out there.

www.meetrickperry.com
06:28 AM on 08/24/2011
I do know evolution is a statement to explain a phenomenon of life and no more.
Darwin on his death bed said he wished he never wrote it.
The Athiest are trying to tell a majority of people what they can not have in the scool, simply be cause they do not believe thier is a GOD.
The public school system belongs to the people to honor God And Country.
If the Ahiest do not like it let them start their own special schools.
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foerschnerr
It's easier to do things right the first time.
10:32 AM on 08/24/2011
The mission of the Public School System is to educate the public's children. Teaching religion and honoring God belongs in the church and/or home.
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Reiner-von-Sinn
Fol de rol de rolly O
08:19 PM on 08/24/2011
Hom skoooled rules
06:02 PM on 08/23/2011
I'll tell you what Perry has done for education in Texas. My five-year-old grandson started kindergarten yesterday in Dallas. He is a Caucasian English-speaker, but he is in a kindergarten class where all but three are Spanish-speakers. Every subject except math is taught in Spanish. I'm all for learning a foreign language, but he hasn't learned anything in English yet! Does this make sense to anyone? This is America!
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quillerm
12:28 PM on 09/03/2011
You now are aware of the problem in Texas. By not securing our border with Mexico, Obama has created a nightmare for Governors like Perry with 1.5 million Illegals in Texas. Leftists are smearing Perry for not keeping up with the flood of Illegals in services, education and other programs, yet no Federal assistance is provided.
12:32 AM on 09/04/2011
WHO doesn't want to provide federal assistance? That would be the Republicans. I think you have your parties mixed up. Perry doesn't want help from the government--he's all about doing everything at the state level, and he's extremely hypocritical about that at best. Doesn't want government involved in getting distracted cell phone users off the road (causing many deaths annually), but wanted to force all young girls to get the HPV vaccine, and recently passed a law making it illegal to call those with special needs "retarded" or "crippled," etc. I'm all for that--it is absolutely wrong--but maybe more a moral issue than a government one. Interesting how he picks and chooses what the government should be involved in. Perhaps Perry doesn't mind the flood of illegals--his fat-cat contributors make a lot of money off them.
05:32 PM on 08/23/2011
PERRY will make a great president--but then any president will be better then the one we have--a talking chimp could do as well as obama---
dustoff74
Old age is inevitable, but immaturity is forever
03:26 PM on 08/23/2011
Interesting article. Perry's tried some stuff that hasn't worked as well as hoped.

Has anybody ever seen a similar article concerning Obama and any of his pre-White House policies or actions? Is Chicago more "organized" because of all his "hard work?"

You actually have to do something before there is anything to criticize....
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Gary Dorrington
02:04 PM on 08/23/2011
Rick Perry is ensuring that Texas children get the education they need. After all, what do they need to know to work at Pizza Hut?
dustoff74
Old age is inevitable, but immaturity is forever
03:28 PM on 08/23/2011
What, are all the pizzas being delivered to Arizona?

And next time, make sure there is extra cheeze or no tip for you!
05:34 PM on 08/23/2011
with obama in office the kids can't even get a job at a pizza hut---no opens- and obama has cause hiring to become to expensive---
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Gary Dorrington
05:53 PM on 08/23/2011
Doesn't matter really does it, Texas is turning into a dust bowl? I suppose you think that's Obama's fault as well. It proves one thing though, Obama's 'Kenyan' juju is more powerful than Dick Perry's prayers.
09:40 AM on 08/24/2011
SOME ONE IS CHANGING MY WORDING AT AOL OR HUFF AND PUFF
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El Chingaso
Fighting for mental superiority...
01:54 PM on 08/23/2011
Public education systems in the U.S. have distinguished their organizations as complete disasters (and, thank you, D.O.E., for your inane contributions), but so what? Such calamity -- and comedy -- has gone on since the early-to-mid-1970s. Any parent with half a brain & some discipline can educate their children...far & above what taxpayer-supported schools can accomplish. You don't have to be a rocket scientist to work in public schools (in fact, the less c*mpetent the better) so why in the world would anyone send their kid(s) there these days and expect worthwhile achievement?

Sorry teachers and inc**petent administrators: education curriculum in higher education...can't compare to an engineering degree and a master's degree in business administration -- with full concentrations in accounting & finance (C.P.A.-level courses).
03:10 PM on 08/23/2011
That's why we sent our child to private school and he did far better than his peers in public school. Instead of having to waste his learning time on the liberals' agenda he actually learned reading, writing, math, science, etc. Today he is a senior engineer for a large company at the age of 30 while his peers can tell you all about the "rainbow connection" and all things "green" while cashing their unemployment checks.
03:55 PM on 08/23/2011
Bravo to you, excellent post. But please keep in mind that in high tax states like NY,NJ,CT,MA, people cannot put enough $$ aside for a private school. Those children are doomed to crime, failure, and violence as graduates of the disgusting liberal public schools.
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El Chingaso
Fighting for mental superiority...
07:12 AM on 08/24/2011
Thank you for...introducing reality into the public school scam/madness debate. Very inspirational post, too...
07:08 PM on 08/23/2011
You people amaze me. how did you get all that education if it weren't for your so called incompetent teachers and administrators and the curriculum that you took, and the rest of you who posted and follow this narrow minded person. I am not sure but I will match my lowly public school education against you anytime. We can see ow my incompetent teachers fair against yours
07:19 PM on 08/23/2011
With all due respect, I have lived in the two systems and the public system is sorely lacking. The taxpayers are just not getting their money's worth. So we will just have to agree to disagree.
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El Chingaso
Fighting for mental superiority...
06:36 AM on 08/24/2011
Private school(s), baby. The only way to go...for the "privileged" class.
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Gem Mayers
01:16 PM on 08/23/2011
Ugh. As a libertarian (folks say that makes me a repub?) Christian who, gasp, does NOT support Perry, his ideas scare me. (I like huff po as I dunno....Palin style news is not my forte.) Heck most politicians ideas on education scare me. I have questions though for ed reformers and the like. To save re-typing I posted them on my blog at http://3rseduc.blogspot.com/2011/08/questions-to-those-complaining-about.html
01:39 PM on 08/23/2011
This is not the post of a Libertarian!
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Gem Mayers
02:23 PM on 08/23/2011
Ok what IS a libertarian post? Just curious :) and also what do I seem to be if not a Libertarian? Not slamming you here, just wondering.
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Fran04
12:29 PM on 08/23/2011
Our future as a country depends on our children, but the present governor of Texas is not the person who will improve our educational system. While he has been governor of Texas for 10 years & 245 days making Perry the longest continuously serving current U.S. governor, Texas's high schools was ranked 27th in the country and Texas leads this nation with the number of people under 25 lacking a H.S. diploma or dropping out of school.
So, why would anyone think that he would do any better as President of the United States and for that matter why is anyone even listening to him? Have we not learned our lessons with former President Bush (who was also a Texas governor) with his No children left behind policy.
Are we going to entrust this man who is the governor of the worst educational system in this country with our children’s future, with our future?
01:26 PM on 08/23/2011
I ask you think Obama is? He was senator of Chicago. Chicago..mind you. Most of his advisors are friends from Chicago also. Three years already.We will not survive another 4
hatenomor
DO FOR SELF. BLACK SELF DETERMINATION
01:38 PM on 08/23/2011
Are you trying to say Chicago politics are corrupt? Really? I disagree. Chicago politics are only corrupt when the democrats are in charge, not when the republicans are.
hatenomor
DO FOR SELF. BLACK SELF DETERMINATION
01:39 PM on 08/23/2011
You do know I have my tongue firmly in cheek, don't you?
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03:28 PM on 08/23/2011
BECAUSE OUR STATE ISN'T FILLED WITH 50 ILLEGALS AS IS TEXAS,,,, REMOVE THEM FROM THE EQUATION AND YOU HAVE A NORMAL POPULATION OF AMERICAN KIDS.
10:20 PM on 08/23/2011
Actual, the bilingual kids in Texas do as well or better than the other kids. And the number of immigrants has declined steadily since 2000. Only a small percentage of Texas studnets are first-generation from other countries.
12:03 PM on 08/23/2011
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama is in a dead heat with Republicans presidential candidates Mitt Romney, Rick Perry, Michele Bachmann, and Ron Paul among registered voters, according to a Gallup poll issued Monday.

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney leads Obama by two percentage points — 48 percent to 46 percent, when respondents were asked whom they would vote for if the 2012 presidential election took place today.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Obama are tied at 47 percent.

Democrat Obama edges out Texas Congressman Ron Paul 47 percent to 45 percent and leads Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann by four percentage points, 48 to 44 percent.

The results show that, at this point in the campaign, voters are fairly evenly divided but that the GOP candidates have a chance to beat the incumbent president.

The poll results are based on interviews with 1,026 voters on Aug. 17-18, as a part of a daily track survey and has a sampling error of plus or minus four percentage points.

Interestingly, for all except for Paul, all of the GOP candidates perform better among members of their party than Obama does among Democrats, msnbc.com reports. Among Democrats, Obama earns between 84 and 86 percent among across the four matchups.

Independents favor Romney and Paul, and they lead among that group by three points; and Perry by two.
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comicpro
Stupid Should Be Painful
12:13 PM on 08/23/2011
The election is 15 months away. Can you say a bit early to even bring this up or are you in the "I listen to every poll under the sun camp"?
12:16 PM on 08/23/2011
Have you read all these posts. I have. This is in support of anyone but Obama !
12:27 PM on 08/23/2011
Survey Methods
Results are based on telephone interviews conducted as part of Gallup Daily tracking survey Aug. 17-18, 2011, with a random sample of 1,026 adults, aged 18 and older, living in all 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia.

http://www.gallup.com/poll/149114/obama-close-race-against-romney-perry-bachmann-paul.aspx
11:25 AM on 08/23/2011
At least obama's results on everything can't be called mixed, total failure perhaps but not mixed
12:30 PM on 08/23/2011
only to someone getting his "facts" directly from Fox.
12:39 PM on 08/23/2011
The qute LIberal CBS news (not Fox) released a national poll....Obama approval rating 21%. Sounds like a whole lot of people consider his policies as having failed.
12:41 PM on 08/23/2011
Fox is the boogieman is'nt it?