BW Poll: Gap in perceptions of Cleveland schools, mayoral candidate recognition
A new phone survey of Cleveland residents conducted by the Baldwin Wallace University Community Research Institute (CRI), under the direction of Dr. Tom Sutton, finds mixed perceptions of the quality of K-12 education choices in Cleveland.
The survey also found wide-ranging familiarity with declared and possible candidates campaigning to be the next mayor of Cleveland.
Perceptions of parents about Cleveland K-12 schools
The survey asked respondents about perceptions and experience with schools in Cleveland. Due to the broad mix of types of schools in Cleveland (public, parochial, charter), the survey refers to K-12 schools in general rather than schools that are part of the Cleveland Metropolitan School District (CMSD).
The District includes 107 schools; approximately 60 additional schools not affiliated with CMSD are also located in Cleveland and primarily serve Cleveland resident families.
Among the poll's findings:
-
26%
of
respondents
currently
have
one
or
more
children
enrolled
in
a
K-12
school
in
Cleveland,
while
52%
of
respondents
know
a
family
with
children
attending
a
Cleveland
school.
-
83%
of
respondents
with
children
in
schools
think
teachers
do
their
best
to
help
their
children
learn.
-
90%
agree
that
they
can
share
their
concerns
with
teachers
and
84%
agree
that
school
staff
are
responsive
when
contacted
by
parents.
-
79%
are
"extremely
or
somewhat
likely"
to
recommend
their
child's
school
to
other
parents.
- 84% are "extremely/somewhat satisfied" with their child's education.
Respondents indicated that online instruction has had challenges, but that it has generally gone smoothly. 5% of respondents had difficulties with internet access and/or computers.
Overall perceptions of CMSD
-
27%
of
respondents
think
CMSD
is
"much
better
or
somewhat
better"
than
the
District
was
five
years
ago.
Some
22%
rated
the
District
as
"excellent
or
good,"
26%
as
"fair,"
and
29%
as
"poor."
-
Asked
what
respondents
would
recommend
to
a
Cleveland
family
with
school-aged
children,
9%
chose
a
CMSD
school,
10%
a
charter
school
and
14%
a
Catholic
or
other
religious
school.
Just
9%
recommended
the
family
move
out
of
Cleveland.
- 60% of respondents graduated from a Cleveland public or charter high school. Of these respondents, 62% rated their education as "excellent or good."
"Parents with children in Cleveland schools have very positive perceptions of the efforts of teachers and are satisfied with the educational experience of their children," Sutton noted. "A majority of graduates of Cleveland schools also have positive ratings of the schools. However, it appears that the general public needs convincing that there are quality public, parochial and charter schools in Cleveland."
Awareness of candidates for Cleveland Mayor
"If the electorate is seeking new leadership for Cleveland, candidates will need to work hard to raise their public profiles," Sutton said.
"This is a challenge in a local election with voter turnout rates of 30%. Long-time names in Cleveland politics get high name recognition, but this does not translate into electoral support at this early stage of the mayoral campaigns," he added.
Survey results include:
- Dennis Kucinich leads with highest familiarity at 78% "very/somewhat familiar," followed by Zach Reed at 70%, Basheer Jones at 54% and Kevin Kelley at 47%.
- 48% of respondents were unsure about who would be their first or second choice for a candidate for mayor. Of the 52% who made a choice, Dennis Kucinich led with 17.8%, followed by Basheer Jones at 13.3%, Zach Reed at 8.8% and Kevin Kelley at 5.9%.
Survey Methodology
A telephone survey of 421 residents of Cleveland, Ohio, was conducted during the period of March 15 - April 29, 2021. Calls were conducted by students in the BW Community Research Institute Call Center on Mondays - Thursdays, 6-9 p.m. The time period is longer than a typical phone survey due to COVID-19-related restrictions on the number of callers allowed in the call center. The sampling margin of error is +5% at the 95% confidence interval. Data is unweighted.
Access the full survey data here.