2 minute read
The Explainer
What is the impact of the state of Texas’ takeover of the Houston Independent School District?
WHEN TEXAS LEADERS announced the plan to take over Houston ISD in March, we asked Ruth N. López Turley and Erin Baumgartner to share their expertise with us.
Turley is the director of Rice’s Kinder Institute for Urban Research, and Baumgartner is the director of the Houston Education Research Consortium — a partnership between the Kinder Institute and 11 Houston-area school districts that was created to guide policy and improve educational equity. Together, Baumgartner and Turley have supported Houston ISD through research to help guide decisionmaking for more than a decade. They talked to us about what the takeover means to students, faculty and parents and the best way to improve academic performance in public schools.
In brief, what events triggered the takeover of HISD in March 2023? While the takeover was announced in March 2023, it was really sparked by Texas Education Agency efforts to take over the district, which began in November 2019 and have been in legal battles since. The primary reasons stated for the takeover were having a campus rated as “unacceptable” in accountability ratings for five consecutive years and having a conservator/ monitor appointed to the district for more than two consecutive years.
What does research tell us about the likely impacts on student performance?
In the years immediately following a takeover, what researchers have seen in districts across the country is that student test scores often decline, taking about five years for students to recover to pre-takeover levels.
So what comes next for the district?
The takeover will last for a minimum of five years. After two years, if the district meets certain requirements, there is the possibility of starting to phase a third of the elected board members back on to the board each year. The appointed superintendent and an appointed board of managers will serve as the primary leadership.
What alternatives to a takeover can address school performance?
Alternatives typically focus on the specific schools that are underperforming and include actions such as closing schools, merging schools or partnering with a charter school. All of these actions, including a takeover, assume that the problems stem from governance issues. Governance definitely matters, but research shows that the strongest predictor of performance gaps — like those seen in HISD and throughout the country — is the concentration of poverty in schools. This means that one effective way to reduce and even eliminate performance gaps is by integrating schools and school districts. Although Texas has increased school funding over the past few years, it is still well below the national average, coupled with a high proportion of students in poverty with many needs.
How is the consortium staying involved with the district?
Our aim is to continue providing support to HISD through our partnership, identifying areas in which research could help guide decision-making and efforts to provide equitable educational experiences for students in the district.
— INTERVIEW BY LYNN GOSNELL
Read more at magazine.rice.edu/ takeover.