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Dr. Lowell Holtz announces his candidacy for state superintendent in Hales Corners near the Veteran's Memorial, one out of four stops he made July 12 to formally begin his campaign.   Photo by Tiffany Stoiber Dr. Lowell Holtz announces his candidacy for state superintendent in Hales Corners near the Veteran's Memorial, one out of four stops he made July 12 to formally begin his campaign.   Photo by Tiffany Stoiber

Dr. Lowell Holtz announces his candidacy for state superintendent in Hales Corners near the Veteran's Memorial, one out of four stops he made July 12 to formally begin his campaign. Photo by Tiffany Stoiber

By Dave Umhoefer March 30, 2017

Candidate says Wisconsin deserved a D+ grade on preparing students for college

Lowell Holtz says voters should revolt on April 4 and dismiss Tony Evers from the head of the class -- his position as Wisconsin’s state superintendent of public instruction.

In a recent attack on learning outcomes in the Evers era, the conservative challenger noted that Evers’ declared mission is "Every Child a Graduate, College and Career Ready."

But among high schools in Wisconsin, "roughly a third are missing the mark of graduating young adults who are college ready," Holtz wrote in a March 26, 2017 posting on his campaign web page.

"That’s a pass rate of 66.6 percent, which equates to a D+ on my grading scale," he wrote.

To back his claim, Holtz cited data on how many graduating high school students need remedial help when they enter the University of Wisconsin System. Typically that involves assistance with math, but sometimes with English.

Under a 2015 state law, high schools have to provide that information to the state Legislature.

Holtz correctly says in his post that 175 schools were identified in the 2015 version of the report. That’s 34% of the 510 public high schools in the state -- apparently the "roughly a third" he spoke of.

There are private schools in that 175, however, so the proper denominator (using both public and private schools) is 575. That means 30 percent of schools made the list.

So Holtz is slightly off.

More significantly, there’s a false precision problem that hurts his claim.

In reality, it’s impossible for the public to see exactly how many schools had students who needed help. That’s because, as Holtz noted, only schools where 7 or more students need such help must be publicly identified by the university system. It’s a privacy measure meant to protect the identify of individual students.

So it’s very likely more schools would be on the list if the privacy provision did not exist.

Making the grade

Is making the list proof that these schools are "missing the mark" and not worthy of a passing grade on graduating "college-ready" students, as Holtz says?

Holtz argues it is, citing Evers’ "Every Child a Graduate, College and Career Ready" mission statement. Even if just a few students need extra help, Holtz categorizes that as a failure.

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Tom McCarthy, a spokesman at the Evers-led Department of Public Instruction, says the slogan means the goal is college or a career for each student.

Given the phrasing, it’s easy to see how one might interpret it as college for "every child," so Holtz’s  rhetoric doesn’t strike us as out of bounds.

More importantly, though, there is a major problem in characterizing the list. The report doesn’t rank the schools or characterize their outcomes as passing or failing -- yet Holtz lumps all the schools on the list into one failing category.

The list includes every school that had at least 7 students who needed help, regardless of the size of the senior class and no consideration of how many -- or few -- of its graduates are in the state university system.

So the list includes many schools where you can count on two hands the number of students who needed remedial assistance.

For instance, Brookfield East had 10 students who needed math help, landing it on Holt’s failure list, despite the fact the number represents just 7.7 percent of the school’s 130 UW-bound pupils.

At the same time, the list includes a few schools where the rate is over 70 percent. (On average, it was 40 percent for math across all the listed schools).

Many of the schools with higher rates have very few students going to the UW system. For example, Johnson Creek High School was listed as 80 percent needing math help -- or 8 of 10.

Who is ready?

Another factor in checking Holtz’s claim is how to define "college ready."

Holtz says the need for remedial help is enough to show the students were not ready.

But the students already were accepted into college. The need for any remedial help is established in placement tests after their acceptance.

The rating

About a third of Wisconsin’s high schools "are missing the mark of graduating young adults who are college ready," Lowell Holtz claimed, a "pass rate of 66.6 percent."

Holtz cites legitimate data and makes fair use of Evers’ own words to judge the incumbent’s record.

But the limits of the data, and Holtz’s blanket characterization of 175 schools as failing on preparing students for college, create significant misperceptions.

For a statement that contains some element of truth but ignores critical facts, our rating is Mostly False.

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Mostly False
About a third of Wisconsin’s high schools "are missing the mark of graduating young adults who are college ready," a "pass rate of 66.6%."
In a campaign website post
Sunday, March 26, 2017

Our Sources

Lowell Holtz campaign blog post, March 26, 2017

Interview with Charles Sanger, president, CS Communications, spokesman for Holtz campaign, March 29, 2017

Interview with Thomas McCarthy, communications director, Department of Public Instruction, March 28, 2017

University of Wisconsin System, (WI Act 28) Report on Remedial Education, Immediate New Freshmen from Wisconsin High Schools, Fall 2015

 

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Candidate says Wisconsin deserved a D+ grade on preparing students for college

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