|
The 1996 Michigan Education Poll
December 1996
Summary
The Michigan Education Poll began in 1982 as
a project of the Michigan Department of Education (MDE) Project
Outreach program. The 1996 Michigan Education Poll is the
12th survey in this series and was conducted for the MDE by
Public Sector Consultants, Inc. This year's poll marks the
fourth year that private sponsors have underwritten the survey;
the sponsors are:
- Detroit Federation of Teachers
- Michigan Association of School Boards
- Michigan Business Leaders for Education
Excellence
- Michigan Department of Education
- Michigan Education Association
Overall, in comparison to the 199394
survey, grades respondents give schools are up but still within
historical trends. The percentage
of respondents giving public schools an A or B grade increased
from 42 percent in 199394 to 54 percent in this survey.
However, when results are compared over time, the 199394
grades stand out as an exception to the generally favorable
marks given Michigan schools. The lower grades in 199394
may have been due to the public's focus at the time on education
reform, especially Proposal A. The 199394 grades were
identical to those of another period of intense discussion
about education1982, when the national report, A
Nation at Risk, attracted similar attention to education.
This year's A/B grades mark a return to normal and therefore,
are not a substantial departure from the past.
Demographically, in this survey, 59 percent
of parents with school-age children and 50 percent of "nonparents"
give the schools an A/B grade. More public-school parents
give the local public schools an A/B (64 percent) than do
private-school parents (38 percent). Regionally (see map in
full report), Detroit, metropolitan Detroit, and western Michigan
residents all are more generous with A/B responses than they
were in 199394. Central and northern Michigan and the
Thumb remain constant, while only southern Michigan gives
fewer A/B grades (dropping from 51 percent in 199394
to 45 percent in this survey). The percentage of A/B grades
awarded by southern Michigan respondents in this year's survey
also is lower than in the 1992 survey (66 percent).
|
Percentage
of A/B Grades Awarded, by Subgroup
|
|
|
1996
Survey
|
199394
Survey
|
| All
respondents |
54%
|
42%
|
| Public-school
parents |
65
|
47
|
| Private-school
parents |
38
|
31
|
| African-Americans |
31
|
16
|
| Caucasians |
57
|
45
|
| Detroit
residents |
34
|
12
|
| Education-sector
employees |
77
|
56
|
| For-profit
sector employees |
52
|
37
|
| >$60,000
annual income |
64
|
56
|
| <$20,000
annual income |
50
|
34
|
| 4-year
college degree or more |
61
|
55
|
| High
school graduate |
53
|
39
|
Grades for and opinions about specific
skills of graduating seniors and some aspects of the education
process are slightly higher than in the last survey. In
this survey, more respondents than in 199394 give A/B
grades for the math, science, reading and writing, employability,
and technology skills of graduating seniors. This year, 35
percent to 39 percent of the respondents give each of these
skill levels an A or B; in the 199394 poll, the range
was 30 percent to 35 percent. Grades for providing a safe
environment, gaining the support of parents, and other aspects
of the education process also are slightly higher than in
199394.
Southern Michigan is a region to watch.
Unlike elsewhere in the state, southern Michigan respondents
(Jackson, Washtenaw, Monroe, Lenawee, and Hillsdale counties)
give their local public schools lower grades in this survey
than they did in either 1992 or 199394, and an increasing
percentage of the region's residents believe that schools
are getting worse. However, southern Michigan
residents give among the highest marks of any region to the
positive effects of the passage of 1994's Proposal A, which
shifted the basis of the school finance system from local
property taxes to the state sales tax. They also give high
marks to the technology skills of their local public school's
graduating seniors. In addition, more southern Michigan residents
report themselves to be knowledgeable about the schools than
do residents of nearly every other region.
A majority of respondents believe that
students from their local schools are either very or somewhat
prepared to both compete for jobs in a world economy and enter
college ready to learn. In nearly all subgroups a majority
of respondents believe that students are very prepared or
somewhat prepared for the world beyond high school. One substantial
demographic difference does exist: 68 percent of Caucasian
respondents believe students graduate ready to compete in
a world economy, but only 41 percent of African-Americans
hold that view; 74 percent of Caucasian respondents believe
that local students are entering college ready to learn, but
only 47 percent of African-Americans share that confidence.
Respondents feel very good about the
level of technology in public school classrooms. A majority
of nearly every demographic subgroup believes that computers
improve education and that it is important for every student
to have access to a computer at school. However, the entire
sample is nearly evenly split among those who (1) support
upgrading technology with additional taxation, if necessary,
(2) support upgrading technology with existing funds, redirected
from other school programs, and (3) support no immediate technology
upgrades at all.
A majority of respondents hold the
position that schools should teach values and help students
to develop good character traits. Among both public- and
private-school parents, there is considerable and consistent
support for schools teaching values (supported by 91 percent
and 87 percent, respectively) and helping students to develop
good character traits (supported by 93 percent and 92 percent,
respectively).
Respondents feel like ownersof
the public schools, but they do not believe that their local
district treats them as customers. Schools
help people feel that they are owners of the schools (52 percent
of all respondents feel like owners, 44 percent do not). However,
schools have more work to do to make members of the public
feel as if they are school customers.
This survey finds no difference of opinion on
the customer aspect among parents and nonparents of school-age
children. In addition, we find that feelings of both ownership
and customer treatment cut across most demographic groups:
When respondents are grouped according to those who feel they
are (a) both owners and customers, (b) one or the other, or
(c) neitherwe see that the responses are largely unaffected
by respondent age, education level, income, race, type of
community, or employment sector.
However, feelings of customer satisfaction
and ownership are very good predictors of responses to other
questions. Seventy-three percent of respondents who feel like
customers give their local public schools A/B grades overall,
while only 43 percent of noncustomers grade the same. When
asked about the skills of graduating seniors, A/B grades are
given by an average of 9 percent more owners than nonowners
and an average of 18 percent more customers than noncustomers.
Press Release
Download the full report
(Adobe® Acrobat format)
The full report includes the summary, background
and methodology, review of results by topic, and the survey
instrument with percentage responses. (About 242 KB)
|