Monday, April 21, 2014

Enrollment multiplier debated across the country

Daily News (West Bend, Wis.)
Published: April 16, 2014



Enrollment multiplier debated across the country

WIAA members to vote today

By NICHOLAS DETTMANN
Daily News

Since it was put on the WIAA’s annual meeting agenda last month, the debate over a proposed 1.65 enrollment multiplier for nonpublic schools in Wisconsin has been passionate.
The WIAA will host its annual meeting today in Stevens Point with school administrators, who will then decide if an enrollment multiplier is necessary.
“I understand the arguments both sides make for and against it,” Kewaskum Athletic Director Jason Piittmann said. “But I also don’t know that maintaining the status quo is the right answer either. I don’t know if 1.65 is the right answer.”
The proposal was introduced through a petition submitted to the WIAA. The petition was started by members of the Six Rivers Conference in southwest Wisconsin. The WIAA’s Constitution allows its membership to bring forth a proposal if at least 10 percent of the membership signs the petition. More than 70 have signed it, according to WIAA Executive Director Dave Anderson.
“A multiplier is not new,” Anderson said. “It’s been studied and examined in other states and our state. It has been debated and discussed by the membership. A lot of data was examined.”
HISTORY OF THE MULTIPLIER
Alabama was the first state to adopt a multiplier in 1999, according to an Institute of Education Sciences study.
The Alabama Athletic Association had two proposals from the membership that sought to eliminate private schools from the association or to create a separate association.
After considering the matter, the AAA developed a 1.35 multiplier, which learned through its research that the athletic participation rate among private schools was 35 percent higher than that in public schools.
The proposed 1.65 number came from Illinois’ high school association.
Missouri has a 1.35 multiplier. Arkansas had a 1.35 multiplier as well, but was raised to 1.75 in 2005, five years after its inception.
Tennessee has the highest multiplier in the country at 1.8.
Georgia initially proposed a 2.0 multiplier in 1999. Georgia’s multiplier was proposed when a state legislator was upset his daughter-in-law’s debate team at a small public school kept losing to a nationally ranked team from a private school.
It had a 1.5 multiplier until 2008 when the state’s athletic association decided to go away from the multiplier. In the first year without the multiplier, nonpublic schools won 45 percent of the state championships.
Arizona, Minnesota, Ohio, Pennsylvania and South Carolina have explored a multiplier, but found limited support for it. Indiana and Nebraska have rejected a multiplier.
In 2002, Missouri passed its multiplier despite 113 schools refusing to vote. After it passed, parents from five Catholic high school students sued the MSHSAA, Missouri’s high school governing body, claiming the multiplier was without a reasonable basis.
The lawyers for the MSHSAA included in its defense a study done by a University of Missouri professor that found “no statistically significant correlation between the rate of participation in a school and its success on the field.”
The parents lost the suit.
WISCONSIN’S HISTORY WITH MULTIPLIER
In 2005, former WIAA Executive Director Doug Chickering called for a statewide survey for the number of student athletes coming into a school (public or private) from outside the local public school district.
Since Wisconsin is an open enrollment state, Chickering said “That’s why I keep telling members we can’t look at it as a public versus nonpublic school issue. We have to look at open enrollment too.”
In 2006, the WIAA’s members begged for Chickering to make the private-public school multiplier issue the top priority, according to an Institute of Education Sciences study in 2007.
“They told us that the time for talk is over, that the public versus private schools issue has to be resolved,” he said.
Among the ideas he proposed were: apply an enrollment multiplier for the open enrollment student counts for both public and private schools; require all private schools within a Division 1 school district to play up one division; let schools play up a division in any sport they choose; do not allow a school that has won a state tournament to move down a division even if its enrollment declines; apply a multiplier to the number of students that receive tuition assistance (private schools); establish a higher initial placement for new member schools.
WHAT HAPPENS IF IT PASSES?
The arguments surrounding the multiplier are recruiting and competitive balance.
Living Word Lutheran Principal Dave Miskimen said schools that recruit will continue to do so.
“They’ll continue to operate unethically,” he said. “If recruiting is a problem, multipliers aren’t the solution. Unethical recruitment is not a private school issue.”
As for competitive balance, Miskimen just doesn’t believe a multiplier will change anything.
“I do also believe that there’s a component to it that thinks private schools have it easy and they don’t have to work that hard,” he said. “I think it’s based on trying to change the bar.
“It raises the bar for schools like us.”
He added if that happens, the nonpublic schools, he believed, will just be more motivated.
“I think each state association really has to do some soul-searching,” B. Elliot Hopkins, director of sports and educational services for the National Federation of State High School Associations, told athleticbusiness.com in 2012. “What administrators do in one state may have no place in another state. There’s no right or wrong; it’s just what works best in that state at a particular time.”

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