Does collective bargaining make for better or worse test scores?
With Republican-controlled legislatures and state houses from Wisconsin  to Oklahoma attempting to strip state workers of collective bargaining  rights, figures on the combined SAT and ACT college entrance test scores  in states without them are proving fodder for the ongoing debate.
As republished in The Economist, a chart purporting to show that  combined SAT and ACT scores in the five U.S. states without collective  bargaining rights are among the worst in the country quickly became a  viral hit on Twitter and Facebook. Indeed, this reporter first saw the  information via Andrew Sullivan's blog, which linked to The Economist, a  highly trusted source of information. The specific data showed the  following combined SAT/ACT rankings for the states without collective  bargaining rights for teachers:
* South Carolina -- 50th
* North Carolina -- 49th
* Georgia -- 48th
* Texas -- 47th
* Virginia -- 44th
Wisconsin ranked second, according to the source cited by the Economist.
Though the Economist did note that drawing the conclusion that students  did better as a direct result of the inclusion of collective bargaining  rights for their teachers was tenuous, it suggested that arguing that  doing away with those rights would lift student performance was rather  absurd.
"... this doesn't show that collective bargaining makes school systems  better. But it makes it pretty hard to argue the converse," the  Economist wrote.
 
The problem with the stats? As PolitiFact discovered, the data came from  1999, not 2010. Moreover, a variety of factors account for test score  results.
While the most recent data on SAT/ACT scores shows outcomes not  altogether out of line with the 1999 figures -- with South Carolina  scoring 49th on the 2010 SAT and 46th on the 2009 ACT, while Wisconsin  ranked third and 13th, respectively -- the point remains that judgment  is better withheld on what the scores say in regard to collective  bargaining. Here's how PolitiFact put it:
A review using current data finds that Wisconsin does perform better on  test scores than the non-union states, but not as dramatically as  suggested in the Facebook post. And there is at best limited evidence  that unionization played a causal role in shaping differences in test  scores.
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, argues that allowing teachers unions to  retain collective bargaining rights is too expensive a prospect in light  of the state's budget shortfall.
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Do SAT Scores Prove States Need It?
on Monday, February 28, 2011
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