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J. Celeste Lay www.jcelestelay.com. |
In the last 20
years, school choice options have proliferated in many cities and states. No
city exemplifies this move to school choice more than New Orleans. In the
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005, school reformers dismantled the
low-performing school district and replaced it primarily with autonomous
charter schools. As of 2014, over 90% of its public school students were in a
charter school – the highest proportion for a major city in the nation. In New
Orleans, there are no default neighborhood schools, meaning that parents must
apply for admission and select a school for their children.
In this system,
the information needs are high so that parents can understand the range of
options and how to effectively express their preferences in a new and
ever-changing choice process. This paper examines not only which sources of
information parents are most reliant on, but also whether those who rely on
more objective sources are more satisfied with their choices and more likely to
enroll their children in higher performing schools than those who rely on
sources with inherent biases
.
Information Overload
Economic
theories of rational choice suggest that having more information should lead
people to make decisions that are closer to their interests and to be more
satisfied with their choices. The psychological literature on decision-making,
however, demonstrates that more information is not necessarily better. Having
too many options or too much information can be overwhelming. According to a
popular account, at a certain point, “Choice no longer liberates,” it
“debilitates” (Schwartz 2004, 2). Information “overload” has been associated
with less confidence (Chernev 2003) and satisfaction in one’s choices (Jacoby
1984; Lee and Lee 2004; Diehl and Poynor 2010; Mogilner, et al. 2008). A
seminal study argues that when individuals have more options and more
information, they “feel more responsible for the choices they make, resulting
in frustration with the choice-making process and dissatisfaction with their
choices…” leading to “more regret about the choices they had made” (Iyengar and
Lepper 2000, 1003).
This line of
work also indicates that the information overload that comes with having too
many options or too much information can lead to suboptimal decisions (Jacoby,
et al. 1974; Malhotra 1982; Hastings and Weinstein 2007). Theories of school
choice, however, are based on the idea that more informed parents will make
better choices, leading to improvements in the school system as a whole as lower
performing schools fail because students flock to the better schools.
Are Parents Using Objective Sources More
Confident in Their Choice?
Due to a dearth
of quality information and new and ever-changing enrollment system, in 2007 a
group formed a nonprofit association to publish a comprehensive, objective
Parent Guide that details information about all publicly funded schools and the
application process. This Guide is the most comprehensive source for “one stop
shopping” for parents. I expect that parents who rely on it should be better
informed, better able to make decisions that are closer to their values and
interests, and ultimately more satisfied with their choice. If school choice
advocates are correct, their children should also be more likely to be enrolled
in higher performing schools than those whose parents rely primarily on
word-of-mouth and school advertising.
Using a survey
of New Orleans parents with children enrolled in a public school, the results
indicate that parents utilized many sources as they made their school choice. Those who relied on the Parent Guide were
less likely to believe their child got into his or her first choice school than
those who did not. And, those who used their social networks and school
marketing materials were more satisfied with their choice. The data cannot
definitively show whether parents using the Guide were less satisfied because
they were overwhelmed by the amount of information or whether they were simply
better informed about options that may not have been open to them.
However, the
results show that parents who used a greater number of sources were not more
confident in their choice, suggesting that having more information is not
driving parental satisfaction. Instead, parents using the Guide may have become
frustrated with the flood of information before them.
Are More Informed Parents More Likely to
Enroll Children in High-performing Schools?
Finally, I
examined whether those who relied on more comprehensive information were more
likely to enroll their child in a high-performing school. On this, there were
no significant relationships between information source or number of sources and
the School Performance Score of the selected school. Instead, enrollment in a
high performing school was closely associated with demographic factors. Parents
who were Black or poor were significantly less likely to have a child enrolled
in a high performing school, even controlling for information source.
In 2011,
approximately 95% of the students in the D and F schools in New Orleans were
Black. About 90% of those in C schools were Black; 87% of students in B schools
were Black; and only 60% of those in A schools were Black. In essence, Black and/or poor parents can use
any information source and they remain less likely to have a child in one of
the city’s best schools. Their exclusion from these schools is not the result
of parental ignorance or “bad” choices. Further, given that parents give the
same reasons for selecting a school regardless of race or class, these
demographic differences in enrollment patterns are not because these parents
have distinct preferences, but rather they are due to the intentional actions
of schools.
Policy Implications
From a policy
perspective, if parents who utilize more comprehensive information sources are
more satisfied and confident in their choices and more likely to enroll their
kids in high performing schools, then the solution is simple: policy makers
should ensure that this type of information gets into the hands of more
parents. The policy solution is less clear, however, when using these sources
is associated with less confidence and satisfaction. One potential work-around
may be for objective information to be presented in a different format. Perhaps
it would be better to present a greater number of specialized publications
about schools that each has less total information so as not to overwhelm parents.
For example, if one is enrolling her child in kindergarten, she may only need
information at this time about elementary schools. Or, if one has a child with
special needs, he may be served best with a specific publication dedicated to
schools with focused programs for students with special needs.
Finally, that
race and class are so closely associated with the school performance indicators
suggests that merely providing parents with more and/or better information is
not going to automatically result in equal opportunities. As long as public
schools can selectively enroll students through the use of admissions tests and
the like, Black and poor students are less likely to be able to enroll in
higher performing schools. It is unfair, then, to blame these parents for
enrolling their children in failing schools.
There is another major disadvantage to a decentralized school system comprised of competing independent schools such as the New Orleans Recovery District. Low performing students are often treated as undesirables in a system that is rated only on student standardized test performance. Many more of these students tend to drop out of their original school, even at young ages and there is no incentive for other schools to enroll such students. Students that do not conform well to the regimented behavior system of many charter schools often end up being "counseled out" and somehow disappear from the system. That is because the system as a whole does not see any benefit in keeping such students in school. As a result New Orleans has a disproportionate number of uneducated, displaced young people roaming the streets who are inclined to gravitate to a life of dependency and crime. This is a major unintended result of this so called "choice" system. That is because the real choices are being made by the school administrators rather than by the parents.
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