Bob,
Good article.
However, this isn’t a “conservative” problem.
The look-say
nonsense wasn’t right-wing. The 8th grade LA kids are doing
better than the 10th graders. This is because the 8th are
back to phonetics. Yet a generation of kids failed to learn to read because of a
silly idea.
The problem is
always the same. A public body grows and grows and it’s primary objective
changes to maintaining itself. This is true of all educational bodies up to the
highest in the land. Fudging results is part of the operation.
Actually
teaching kids is way down the list.
It’s sad.
Harry
********************************************
Henry George School of Social Science
of Los Angeles
Box 655 Tujunga CA 91042
Tel: 818 352-4141 -- Fax: 818 353-2242
http://haledward.home.comcast.net
********************************************
From: Robert E. Bowd
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, December 17, 2003
2:30 PM
To: Harry Pollard; 'Keith Hudson'
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: FULL OF ADMIRATION
(was RE: Slightly extended (was Re: [Futurework]
David Ricardo, Cavema n Trade vs. Modern Trade
I think the letter, below, about sums up the current state
of education during the conservative restoration in America. Canada is still relatively better, but there are
governance, funding, and curriculum problems, including attempts to imitate
what is happening in America,
and the inadequate provision of educational support to our large immigrant
population.
I personally don't believe the evaluative state (standards
and high stakes testing created by test experts, education technocrats, and
their minority allies in the community) works. Education needs to be
cut free from the corporate agenda of the Business Roundtable and the Business
Council On National Issues. The normalisation of curricular forms based
on the way the private sector conducts business (!) needs to be abandoned.
A lot more thought needs to be given to how the growth and development of
children, in schools, relates to the kinds of communities we want.
Currently, I do not believe the schools are creating the kind of subjectivities
able to face the kind of future we are facing as a society. Critical
thinking is more often taught as a technical skill to be placed in an
organizational tool kit for coping with the information society, rather than as
a complex, contradictory, creative, tension-ridden, open-ended skill that
blends historical memory, ethics, imagination, intuition, cultural common
sense, and reason. And so on.
Good to talk to you, Harry.
From today's Prince
Georges County Journal -- by a PG County Elementary School Teacher ...
Truth left behind
Dec 11 Journal
The current reality of public education in the United States
is based on fiction. The reasons behind the so-called ``No Child Left
Behind" (NCLB) act have turned out to be a lie. We have been had.
The real victims are the young people in our country because
they will receive an inferior public education under the current law. The lies
behind the NCLB were brought to us by the political leadership in Washington.
The current secretary of education, Roderick R. Paige, was
superintendent of the Houston, Texas,
school district before coming to Washington.
The Bush administration fashioned the NCLB based on the concepts of
accountability and high-stakes testing which Paige championed in Houston.
We were assured that those concepts led to the ``education
miracle" achieved in Houston.
The miracle consisted of a disappearing high school dropout rate, greatly
rising scores on the statewide test and a narrowing of the achievement gap
between white and minority students.
The information from Houston
was so good that even Democrats like Sen. Edward Kennedy were convinced of its
validity and gave their support for passage of the NCLB.
Now comes the bad news: The low dropout rate in Houston is mythical and the rising scores on the Texas state test were
manipulated. It is a wonder the Republic is still standing.
In the last two months, we have learned the sad facts about Houston, thanks to
certain individuals in that education community. Local television station KHOU
reported a dropout fiasco at Houston's Sharpstown High School. By changing the codes of
students who dropped out, the school made it appear that very few students
didn't finish high school.
State auditors found similar stories at 14 other Houston high schools. Austin also had unusually
low dropout rates. School officials concede that the reported dropout rates
were worthless and are no longer using them in accountability studies.
During Rod Paige's tenure as superintendent in Houston, some amazing
academic progress took place. In 1995, his first year in Austin,
only 26 percent of tenth graders in Austin
High School passed the Texas math test. By the
2000-01 school year, 99 percent of tenth graders passed the test.
According to a common practice, administrators are allowed
to hold back weak students in the ninth grade for one or two years, then skip
them on to the eleventh grade, effectively excluding them from taking the tenth
grade test.
According to some educators in Houston, this is commonly done, and it
explains the spectacular rise in test scores under Paige's leadership.
The New York Times also examined the performance of Houston students and
reported the results on December 3, 2003. The newspaper report compared scores
on a national exam that Houston students took
alongside the Texas
state exam.
The results show that Houston
students stagnated in the same place or lost ground compared to their
counterparts across the nation. A great big gap exists between the national
test results and the Texas
state results.
Remember, the success of Houston's schools was used as a backdrop and
justification for the creation of the NCLB with its heavy emphasis on
accountability.
Prince George's
County is closely engaged in this debate. Our new CEO, Andre J. Hornsby, is a
close friend of Rod Paige, and believes that the techniques of the Texas education miracle
should be implemented here.
We have had a number of education consultants from Texas, hired by the
Board of Education, hold in-service sessions for county teachers. The reports
from these sessions are that nothing new is learned and that they are a waste
of time.
The truth is, if we are to adhere to the techniques used in
the Texas
miracle, we should lie and cheat to attain high results.
Public schools carry the problems of society on their
shoulders. Educating children is a grueling, complicated process. Anyone coming
to us with easy, facile solutions is either misinformed or a crook. You can
decide which of the two options brought us the so called "No Child Left
Behind" act.
Those of us working with children in schools must now walk a
fine line of staying within the boundaries of a flawed law, while still
delivering a well-rounded education. This has become our new everyday reality.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yvonne N. Baicich is an elementary school teacher in Prince George's County.
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