Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
American students: Raw material or individual persons?
American students: Raw material or individual persons?
May 14, 2026 7:17 AM

Catherine Pakaluk

The quality of K-12 education in America is a major concern. This is largely because, despite marginally high spending per student, the United States does pete very well against other countries on standardized tests. The economics of education particularly interested Catherine Pakaluk, who holds a doctorate in economics from Harvard and is an assistant professor of economics at Catholic University of America. Pakaluk gave a lecture, “Economics of Education,” on June 23 at Acton University. In this talk, she addresses some of the statistics regarding education in America.

The most surprising, and disappointing, figures presented are from a 2010 study, by Raj Chetty and five other researchers, which shows a nearly perfect correlation between kindergarten test scores and wage earnings between 25-27 years old. Different data by Robert Gordon, Thomas J. Kane, and Douglas O. Staiger show that the quality of a math teacher is generally solidified within two years of teaching. After that there is little change in teachers’ ability to improve the average student percentile. According to the same study the top 25 percent of math teachers have a positive impact on their student towards progressing, based on change in percentile of the average student. The average student of the bottom 75 percent of teachers maintain their original percentile or show regression in percentile rank. Even the best math teachers only result in a depressingly small 5 percent positive impact on percentile.

Economists have generally looked to schools and teachers in order to solve the various problems in American education. Pakaluk identifies a new frontier of thought on education: the students themselves. Instead of viewing students as a raw material put into the factory of the school and assembled by the teachers, there may be a better view. Economists began to view schools as a product for which petition (in policy by increasing school choice) ought to increase the quality. According to Pakaluk the product view analysis of education still treats schools like factories. Economists, including Pakaluk, are beginning to turn to the sociological concerns in education. These sociological concerns may be better addressed than they were historically by subjecting the sociological questions of education to economic analysis.

Pakaluk suggests a more human and holistic approach to the economics of education. She says, “We haven’t understood what schools are doing until we’ve understood what schools are able to do for the children of the less well educated.” Properly understanding the relationships between students, homes, religious practices, schools, peers and educators is key to understanding how to help each child experience better es in terms of upward mobility and real progress in education and life circumstances. An example Pakaluk gave was studying how the homogeneity of religion at school, home, and church effects educational es.

Pakaluk asks that we consider students to be more than raw material. Kindergarten in German means “children’s garden.” Too many economists’ research on education has been directed toward trying to improve the factory models with little avail. The view of schools as kindergartens and children as seeds to be planted is much more consistent with Pakaluk’s interpretation of the data. The solution is to study out how to identify different types of seeds and create the kinds of soil that allows these seeds to grow into the strongest plants they can be.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Rev. Sirico on Church Labor Relations
Rev. Sirico was recently quoted in an article by Our Sunday Visitor titled, “Unions, yes. But when the Church is the employer?” The article utilizes various historical examples to describe the relationship between United States Catholic Church leaders and institutions with their employees. The article seeks to demonstrate a strained relationship between Church leaders and their employees by citing historical examples, such as the 1949 gravediggers strike in New York. When Catholic social teaching is discussed in the article, Rev....
Atlas Shrugged – See the Movie, Skip the Book
Is it conceivable to endorse the cinematic adaptation of Ayn Rand’s libertarian manifesto Atlas Shrugged – as I do – while rejecting the flawed ideology which inspired it? I would argue, yes. On the one hand, I place the Beatles at the pinnacle of 1960s pop music while concluding that their song “Mr. Moonlight” is wince-inducing to the point of being unlistenable. Likewise, I admire 99.9 percent of G.K. Chesterton’s body of work yet disagree with him on his assertion...
Acton Commentary: High Gas Prices Devastating to Poor
mentary this week focuses on the how the rise in prices at the pump is impacting the poor. Currently, in many areas of the country a gallon of gas is now priced over $4. I also argue that we need a more coherent energy ing from leaders in Washington. Part of the argument against drilling in ANWR (Arctic Refuge) over a decade ago was that the oil wouldn’t hit the market for 10 years. That’s a very shortsighted way of...
Politics, Civil Society, and Microfinance in South Africa
Returning from a conference earlier this week, I had the chance to speak with Garreth Bloor, a student at the University of Cape Town in South Africa, about his engagement with politics, the role of religion and civil society, and “Mama Africa’s” story of microfinance success. In the interview Garreth mends “The Call of the Entrepreneur” and Lessons from the Poor. ...
Samuel Gregg: Christians in a Post-Welfare State World
The American Spectator published a mentary by Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg. mentary was also picked up by RealClearReligion. Christians in a Post-Welfare State World By Samuel Gregg As the debt-crisis continues to shake America’s and Europe’s economies, Christians of all confessions find themselves in the unaccustomed position of debating the morality and economics of deficits and how to e them. At present, these are important discussions. But frankly they’re pared to the debate that has yet e. And the...
Principles for Budget Reform
With the ongoing budget battle and the possibility of a government shutdown looming, the Acton Institute has released its “Principles for Budget Reform.” The Acton Institute developed four key principles to reforming the federal budget that will be important to not only providing a sound fiscal budget but a budget that also has a strong moral basis. In addition to the four principles, readers can also find staff mentaries that are related to each principle, additional articles written by Acton...
Entrepreneurs Called in Verona
This past April 1, Istituto Acton held a private viewing and debate on The Call of the Entrepreneur in the romantic city of Verona, better known for its romantic association with Romeo and Juliet than with one of Italy’s most mercial regions. Arranged and sponsored by the investors group – Noi Soci – of Cattolica Assicurazione, a private pany founded 115 years at the turn of the 19th century , the documentary was shown to a private audience of 220...
‘Intergenerational Justice’ Later Today with Paul Edwards
I’m scheduled to discuss “A Call for Intergenerational Justice” with Paul Edwards later this afternoon (4:30 pm Eastern). You can listen to the live stream here and we’ll link to the archived audio as well. You can check out my piece in last Saturday’s Grand Rapids Press, “Christ’s kingdom is bigger than the federal government,” and an Acton Commentary from last month, “Back to Budget Basics,” for background. Be sure to visit Acton’s newly-released “Principles for Budget Reform,” too. This...
Acton Commentary: Do Less with Less
In this week’s Acton Commentary, “Do Less with Less: What the History of Federal Debt and Tax Leverage Teaches,” I reflect on how the federal government has lived beyond its means for decades. This reality is especially important to recognize as we approach Tax Day this year as well as in the context of debates about how to address the public debt crisis. There are many who think we need to raise taxes in order to close the historic levels...
Water is not a human right
It sounds draconian and contrary to the beliefs of many humanitarian organizations, including the United Nations which declared water as a basic human right in 2010. However, if we expect to take the correct steps forward to solve the global water crisis, then water must be treated as modity not a basic human right. In his book, The Mystery of Capital, and also in an essay published in the International Monetary Fund, Hernando de Soto explains why capitalism has failed...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved