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Parents Crave a 'Zagats'
for Picking Schools
By LAUREL SHAPER WALTERS
Staff Writer, THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
MONITOR, MAY 5, 1997
St.
Louis — When
his family expanded beyond the capacity of their two-bedroom home, William
Rice went shopping for a school.
"We were literally
going to go find a school first and then ... find a house," says
the father of three young children. But there was no readily available
information to assess the quality of local schools.
In exasperation, Mr.
Rice began collecting data on the 29 public school districts in the St.
Louis area. He found the right place to move his growing family. But he
didn't stop there. Last fall, he published his research results in "School
Scorecard." The 17-page magazine sells for $8.95 and has become something
of a local bestseller.
"I can't believe
how hot this thing is," says one St. Louis bookstore clerk between
calls to other stores to find a copy. "It's just flown off the shelves."
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Guidebooks
and consumer groups are springing up to help parents do comparative
shopping for schools.
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As consumer-oriented parents
like Rice start shopping for schools the same way they pick minivans, the
American passion for rankings is spreading to local public schools. It's
no longer enough to simply rely on test scores. They want comparisons, and
they want details. How many books are in the library? What kind of computers
line the classroom walls?
In many places, the trend
is being fueled by the spread of school-choice plans. Parents no longer
are restricted to the closest school, but can transfer their children
between schools and in some cases, between school districts.
"There is a much
more discriminating shopper for schools today," says Steve Rees,
president of Publishing 20/20 in San Francisco. Mr. Rees is producing
a series of guidebooks on schools in California where a 1994 law allows
parents to send students to any school in the state. The first books,
on San Francisco schools, came out in 1995. This fall, Rees plans to publish
books on four more California counties. "We are hoping to become
to schools what Zagat's is to restaurants," he says.
There is no national
directory or source for these new guidebooks. Many are simply the fruits
of a determined parent's labor. When Nancy Walser, a journalist in Cambridge,
Mass., began thinking about sending her daughter to kindergarten, she
viewed it as one more research project.
The lottery-based desegregation
plan in Cambridge requires every parent to list their top three choices
among 25 elementary programs in the city. "Most of my friends were
just choosing schools based on hearsay and rumor," says Ms. Walser,
who published the "Parent's Guide to Cambridge Schools" last
year.
While Rice's book relies
on statistical data such as test scores, per-pupil spending, and student-to-teacher
ratios, Walser views her book as "an armchair travel piece."
"Schools are so much more than numbers," she says. "I tried
to provide a context as well as the numbers."
Rice agrees statistics
don't tell the whole story, but short visits to schools aren't much help.
"You get the 30-minute tour. Peek in a couple of classrooms and look
at the art hanging on the walls. That is a step you should take, but it
didn't provide enough information on which to base a decision of this
magnitude."
He is amazed by the lack
of complied information. "I can walk into B. Dalton [bookstore] and
buy any of six or seven books on cars, refrigerators, or VCRs. But when
it comes to getting the best education for my children, there's nothing
that helps you out at all."
Much of the data in the
guidebooks are ostensibly public information but "it is not always
easy to get," Rees says. Some school districts are cooperative while
others resist. "I'd been a reporter for 20 years and had covered
wars and the Vatican...," says Clara Hemphill, author of "The
Parents' Guide to the Best New York City Public Elementary Schools,"
due out this fall from SoHo Press. "But ... the Board of Education
bureaucracy pretty much stumped me."
As the consumer orientation
toward education grows, parents are banding together. The Education Consumers
ClearingHouse, an Internet mailing list with some 300 subscribers (www.tricon.net/comm/educon),
is proving that there is "an enormous thirst for accurate information
about schools," says J.E. Stone, an education professor at East Tennessee
State University, which maintains the year-old list.
In Tennessee, Ohio, Texas,
Illinois, and California, parents are forming local education consumer
organizations. "What we have here in local communities is a kind
of grass-roots Dun & Bradstreet [for schools]," Mr. Stone says.Here's
where you can find clippings from newspapers and magazines about California
schools. The sections are sorted both by topic and by region, for your
convenience.
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