It is a little-appreciated irony of history that the big-bang theory was at first welcomed by Christian thinkers such as Pope Pius XII, and rejected by such scientific icons as Albert Einstein, for the same reason: It suggests a creation event, or at least leaves room for one, which, to the mind of Einstein, a devotee of the steady-state theory of the universe, was intellectually unacceptable, even though the evidence supported it. Such is the well-earned prestige of the scientific calling that Barack Obama, not known to be a man of science, famously promised to “restore science to its rightful place” in political life, unlike those flat-earthers in the Bush administration. We all adore science — right up until the moment it tells us something we do not wish to hear.
The results of the HHS study will be of no surprise to anybody who has followed the research on Head Start and similar programs. The “impacts” documented in the study were transitory, vanishing entirely by the early stages of elementary-school education. And some of the impacts were negative; for instance, members of the three-year-old cohort who participated in Head Start were less likely than those in the control group to achieve regular grade promotion. That probably is not evidence that Head Start hurt the three-year-olds; it is more probable that, by random chance, students more likely to be held back were assigned to the Head Start group, and the benefits of Head Start were not consistent enough or large enough to overcome the difference. (The result was considered “statistically significant,” but that merely means it is unlikely — not impossible — for it to be the result of chance.) But the inability of Head Start to overcome the effects of randomness is damning enough in itself.
It was not the American Enterprise Institute or Cato but President Obama’s own Department of Health and Human Services that concluded: “There were initial positive impacts from having access to Head Start, but by the end of 3rd grade there were very few impacts found for either cohort in any of the four domains of cognitive, social-emotional, health and parenting practices. The few impacts that were found did not show a clear pattern of favorable or unfavorable impacts for children. . . . Similar conclusions about the size and lack of persistence of early impacts were reported in a recent broader meta-analysis of early childhood interventions.”
It is no surprise that the administration would wish to ignore these findings. It handled another educational study in a similarly underhanded fashion: The administration intentionally delayed the release of a Department of Education study documenting the effectiveness of the D.C. Opportunity scholarship program, which is abominated by the teachers’ unions, which played a large role in making Barack Obama president because it puts power into the hands of parents rather than public-school administrators. Head Start, by contrast, puts money into the pockets of educators’ unions, which recycle those funds into campaign donations, overwhelmingly to Democrats. One of these programs provides documented benefits, both educational and financial, while one does not. But the Obama administration, in contravention of the best scientific evidence we have, is poised to shunt billions of dollars into the ineffective program while strangling the effective one.