One
of the perennial questions parents face, when deciding where to send their
children to school, is whether government or non-government schools achieve the
best results. Given the financial commitment involved it is only natural to ask
which school sector achieves the strongest outcomes.
Judged
by recent comment pieces in the Fairfax Press like 'No academic advantage in
private schooling' and 'Public, private schools give same results, 30 studies
show' it appears that the evidence is clear.
In the first comment piece Tim Dodd cites a study by researchers at the University of Queensland outlined in the Australian Journal of Labour Economics that argues "the returns to attending private schools are no different to those attending public schools".
Trevor
Cobbold in the second Fairfax piece argues there are "no significant
differences between the results of students from public, Catholic and
Independent schools".
Add
that the same argument is put in a recent piece on The Conversation website,
titled 'Studies consistently find no academic gains from private schooling, but
don't explain why', and parents could be forgiven for thinking there is no
advantage in choosing a Catholic or an independent school.
Why
choose non-government schools if the results are the same?
Reality
check. Instead of under performing there is widespread agreement that
non-government schools, whether literacy or numeracy tests, Year 12 results or
tertiary entry, with the exception of selective secondary schools, achieve the
strongest results.
A
2001 study carried out by the Australian Council for Educational Research
investigating Year 12 performance and tertiary entry concludes that
"School sector has a substantial impact" and that Catholic and
independent school students' results are between 6 to 12 points higher than
government school students.
Gary
Marks, a Melbourne-based researcher, in a 2004 analysis of Year 12 results
reaches a similar conclusion, he writes "So a variety of studies using
different sources of data all show substantial sector differences in university
entrance".
Marks
also argues that non-government schools are more effective at what is described
as 'value-adding' – a situation where a school helps a student achieve a
stronger result than what otherwise might be expected.
In
a research article in the April 2009 edition of the Australian Journal of
Education, Marks writes that "non-government schools relative to
government schools 'add value' (between 5 to 9 percent) to student performance
among those students vying for tertiary entrance between age 15 and Year
12".
Such
is the evidence that even Trevor Cobbold, a strong critic of Catholic and
independent schools, agrees that non-government schools outperform government
schools when he concludes, "Raw comparisons of student outcomes in public
and private schools generally show higher achievement in private schools".
As
the saying goes, there are lies, dammed lies and statistics. Even though it's
clear that Catholic and independent schools achieve the best results critics
argue it's only because their students come from privileged backgrounds. After
adjusting results for home background, including parental occupation,
qualifications and postcode, the critics argue that any advantage non-government
schools have disappears.
Wrong
again. Contrary to the argument that Catholic and independent schools only do
well because students are privileged the research consistently shows that
non-government schools outperform state schools even after adjusting for home
background.
In
relation to NAPLAN results, for example, research by Paul Miller and Derby Voon
from Curtin University concludes that "test outcomes vary by school
sector, with non-government schools having higher school average scores, even
after differences in schools' ICSEA are taken into account" (ICSEA is a
measure of home background).
A
2001 study by the Australian Council for Educational Research concludes that
after adjusting for socioeconomic profile and previous academic achievement,
measured by Year 9 results, that students in non-government schools, on
average, achieve a tertiary entry score 5 to 6 points higher than students in
government schools.
While
such an advantage might appear minor, in relation to highly sought after
university courses like medicine and law one or two points can be decisive.
Research
Report 61 associated with the Longitudinal Surveys of Australian Youth makes a
similar point when concluding, in relation to tertiary entry, that 'the average
socioeconomic status of students at a school does not emerge as a significant
factor".
The
LSAY report also notes "there is also considerable variation within school
sectors, with the government sector having more than its share of
low-performing schools".
In
relation to school completion rates, as measured by staying on to Year 12, it's
also the case that non-government schools achieve stronger outcomes. The
Longitudinal Surveys of Australian Youth Report 59 concludes non-government
schools have a 3 to 8 percentage point advantage.
And
in relation to tertiary completion rates Sally Knipe from Charles Sturt
University writes, "Data from LSAY indicates that students who had
attended Catholic secondary schools are more likely to complete a university
course."
As
to why this is the case, the research is clear. Non-government schools set high
standards, students are motivated, there is a rigorous curriculum and a
disciplined classroom environment and such schools better reflect parents'
expectations.
Based
on his research Marks argues, "non-government schools promote a more
academic environment that lifts student performance". In explaining the
strong outcomes achieved by Catholic schools, Marks writes that instead of home
background, "Other more credible explanations are higher levels of parental
and community involvement with Catholic schools, higher standards of discipline
and greater emphasis on academic performance".
And
the superior performance of non-government schools does not simply relate to
academic results. One Australian study, 'The impact of racism upon the health
and wellbeing of young Australians' concludes that Catholic school students are
more racially tolerant compared to students in government schools.
A
second study, 'Long-term effects of Catholic schooling on wages', investigating
what happens after tertiary studies are completed and graduates enter the
workforce is that those who attended Catholic schools have a better chance of
earning higher salaries.
Both
American and Canadian research also concludes that students who have attended
faith-based schools, compared to students in government schools, are more like
to volunteer, to donate to charities and a more likely to marry and not
divorce.
Trevor
Cobbold refers to 30 studies to support his argument that non-government
schools do not outperform government schools. Andrew J Coulson from the US out
trumps Cobbold when he writes "In more than 150 statistical comparisons
covering eight different educational outcomes, the private sector outperforms
the public sector in the overwhelming majority of cases".
The
critics, instead of attempting to downplay the performance of non-government
schools, should focus on identifying the real reasons such schools do so well
and then analyse what can be done to help government schools achieve similar
results.
2 comments:
Parents who love their children naturally pay to send them to real schools. Thus kids in state schools have parents who don't love them. No amount of state funding can make up for that.
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