Pop Quiz

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Education |
By Sarah Brodsky | Read Time 1 minute

Some people are interpreting this reported gain in U.S. student math scores as a victory for central planning. The U.S. has improved on an international math test since implementation of No Child Left Behind; therefore, the thinking goes, we need more federal oversight and national standards.

I have two questions about that reasoning:

  1. If central planning improves math performance, why does it have no effect on science?
  2. If the U.S. does better in a subject as a response to competition from other countries, doesn’t that say more in favor of competition than planning? Maybe we should have a contest between states, instead of more federal directives.

You may use a calculator.

About the Author

Sarah Brodsky

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