For real education reform, take a cue from the
Adventists
Amid all the buzz on education
reform, the Seventh Day Adventist school system might seem an unexpected place
to look for models in improving student achievement. But by educating mind,
body, and spirit, Adventist schools outperform the national average across all
demographics.
By Elissa
Kido
posted November 15, 2010 at 10:05 am EST
Riverside, Calif. —
Education reform has taken center stage lately as Americans
struggle to close the oft-condemned achievement gap. But quietly in our midst,
the second largest Christian school system in the world has been steadily
outperforming the national average – across all demographics.
The Seventh-Day Adventists' holistic
curriculum serves as a model for how to overcome that gap – the disparity in
academic performance between low-income and minority students and their peers
in higher-income communities. But even more, it shows how to narrow the gap
between mind, body, and spirit, truly educating students for success.
Now, I'm not advocating for
religious instruction to be included in school curricula. Rather, what my
research indicates is that holistic learning – an education that doesn't erect
artificial barriers among disciplines and between mind, body, and spirit – does
indeed result in greater student achievement.
Adventist schools outperform their peers
Since 2006, as part of the
CognitiveGenesis study, two colleagues and I have gathered data on more than
50,000 students enrolled in Seventh-Day Adventist schools. (Unbeknownst to
many, the Adventist Church
runs a Christian school system second only in size to the Roman Catholic
parochial schools.) While we have long believed in the effectiveness of the
holistic approach Adventist schools take, we wanted to quantify, empirically,
how well students in Adventist schools perform.
Even we were surprised by the
results. Our four-year, independently financed study showed that students at
Adventist schools outperformed their peers at the national average in every
subject area.
Between 2006 and 2010, my colleagues
and I analyzed test scores of 51,706 students, based on the Iowa Test of Basic
Skills for Grades 3-8, the Iowa Test of Educational Development for Grades 9
and 11, and the Cognitive Abilities Test for all grades, as well as surveys
completed by students, parents, teachers, and school administrators.
In each subject category, students
attending Adventist schools scored higher than the national average. They also
scored higher than their expected achievement based on assessment of individual
ability – a factor few other schools measure.
One of our most dramatic findings is
that students who transferred to Adventist schools saw a marked improvement in
academic achievement. The more years a student attended an Adventist school,
the more his or her performance improved.
Socioeconomic status and funding aren't factors
A skeptic might argue that private
schools such as those run by the Adventists are made up primarily of wealthy,
white, upper-middle-class students, hence the reason for higher achievement.
Not so.
Our research shows the demographics
of Adventist schools are closer to those of public schools, with high economic
and socioeconomic diversity. Enrollment is open, meaning students are admitted
without the kind of screening for ability that many other private schools
employ. In North America, the Adventist Church runs almost 1,000 schools, many
of which are small and rural. We found no relationship between the size of the
school that students attended and achievement.
Significantly, in this time of decreasing budgets for public schools, we found no link
between per-pupil spending and student achievement. Research by Dave Lawrence,
a graduate student at La Sierra University in Riverside, Calif., indicates that
students at Adventist schools that spend as little as $2,000 to $4,000 per
pupil are roughly at the same achievement level as students in schools that
spend as much as $12,000 per student. Mr. Lawrence found no significant correlation
between a school's budget and student achievement.
The advantages of a holistic approach
So how do we account for the
Adventist advantage? We believe it lies in the holistic approach these schools
take – a commitment to educating mind, body, and spirit. Unlike public schools,
Adventist schools across the country have a standard curriculum. It includes
the traditional "three R's" along with emphasis on spiritual and
physical development. There's a coherence and a connectedness between Adventist
schools that doesn't often exist in other systems.
Some of the biggest predictors for
student achievement, according to statistical models we developed, include
whether students have a positive spiritual outlook, have a healthy relationship
with their parents, and take care of their own health. These are all attitudes
that can be cultivated, and they point to the importance of a holistic approach
to education.
In recent years, the Adventist
Church has been the subject of much public fascination because of its focus on
health, longevity, and wholeness. (PBS ran a documentary earlier this year,
"The Adventists," and the book "The Blue Zones" came out in
2008.) But our research shows that Adventist education can also be a learning
lab, showing how K-12 students nationwide can excel beyond expectations.
True reform of the public school system will take hard work
and innovation, but the Adventists provide a model that can help
reformers hit the "reset" button. Eliminating artificial barriers
between subjects and helping students see the link between how they live and
how they learn are first, but crucial, steps in laying the foundation for true
reform.
Elissa Kido is a professor of
education at La Sierra University, a Seventh-Day Adventist college, where she
directs the CognitiveGenesis Research project.