collegerankings

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Causal follies: The Atlantic on Citizen Schools

Posted on 11:05 AM by Unknown
The Atlantic writes about a very PR-friendly program in which corporate employees teach after regular school hours in middle schools serving disadvantaged students.

Sounds great. Surely someone has evaluated it in some serious way, as the article indicates that it is expanding around the country. What does the Atlantic writer offer up on this score?

First, we learn that students in the program are self-selected:
Citizen Schools now serves about 5,000 middle school students each year across eight participating states, and the program documents lasting effects for its participants. Kids who have gone through Citizen Schools in middle school are less likely to be absent from high school, and graduate from high school at a rate 20 percent higher than their peers.
No causality there. Is there anything else? Well, there is this bit:
Michael Andrew says he knows participating in the program had a positive effect on him. When he was a fourth- and fifth-grader in Boston, he was one of the earliest enrollees. Now, he’s a 24-year-old graduate of Syracuse University who works at AllianceBernstein in information technology. And he’s back with Citizen Schools, this time as a volunteer.
That would be an anecdote, which is to say a participant evaluation with n = 1. The literature provides no real support for such participant evaluations.

Now, the sad fact of the matter, is that there is no way for the reader to be sure that there is not a serious evaluation out there that the Atlantic reporter missed (or did not know to look for) or whether this is really all the literature offers in the way of support for the program. Either way, a disappointment.

Sigh.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Michigan 28, Akron 24
    Dodging a bullet does not even begin to describe this near debacle, with Akron having shots into the end zone on the final four plays! Local...
  • Book: Paying for the Party by Armstrong and Hamilton
    Armstrong, Elizabeth and Laura Hamilton. 2013. Paying for the Party: How College Maintains Inequality . Cambridge, MA: Harvard University P...
  • In praise of payday lenders
    From the Atlantic, something I never thought I would see: a thoughtful, empirically grounded defense of payday lenders and other alternati...
  • Interdisciplinary Seminar in Quantitative Methods
    Local readers will be keenly aware that the most obvious thing that we lack around here is enough seminars to go to each week. After all, th...
  • Fantasy economics
    A proposal (apparently serious) for a REPEC fantasy economist league . I am speechless. Hat tip: Charlie Brown
  • Assorted links
    1. On the history of German restaurants in Ann Arbor. Mainly because it is not within walking distance of campus, I have yet to make it to ...
  • Movie: Monsters University
    Monsters University is what you get when put Monsters Inc and Revenge of the Nerds into a blender. The animation is gorgeous and Billy Cryst...
  • Assorted links
    1. How to save Microsoft ? Sounds like things have come a long way from when they used to mock the corporate culture at IBM (e.g. "the ...
  • Play: My Name is Asher Lev
    My Name is Asher Lev has one more week to go at the Performance Network  in Ann Arbor and is well worth the time. All three actors, especial...
  • Ronald Coase, RIP
    Sad news about the passing of Ronald Coase , but it is hard to argue with living to 102.

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (257)
    • ►  September (18)
    • ►  August (34)
    • ►  July (58)
    • ►  June (4)
    • ▼  May (16)
      • Assorted links
      • Frontiers of academic research: metal music studies
      • Has Obama jumped the shark?
      • On the bells in the Bell Tower at Michigan
      • Peer review follies
      • CDC takedown
      • Assorted links
      • Beer league hockey without the beer?
      • Book: The End of Eternity by Isaac Asimov
      • Frank and Ernest on the difficulty of insuring aga...
      • Audi and Spock
      • A comic about fathers in honor of mother's day
      • Seminary Co-op Grand Re-opening
      • Causal follies: The Atlantic on Citizen Schools
      • Assorted links
      • Reinhart and Rogoff
    • ►  April (25)
    • ►  March (35)
    • ►  February (41)
    • ►  January (26)
  • ►  2012 (243)
    • ►  December (47)
    • ►  November (30)
    • ►  October (28)
    • ►  September (45)
    • ►  August (73)
    • ►  July (20)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile