An expose in the Minneapolis Star-Tribune uncovered fraud, waste, and incompetence in the federal program for tutoring called Supplementary Educational Services. This program is part of No Child Left Behind, and it created the equivalent of a voucher program for after-school tutoring. Instead of encouraging schools to provide trained and certified teachers for the extra tutoring that low-performing students need, NCLB inspired the creation of a tutoring “industry.”
Ten years ago, when Congress created the tutoring program as part of No Child Left Behind, proponents believed the private market would accomplish what the public sector had failed to do.
For the first time, many parents would have a say in how their kids were educated. If they didn’t like the troubled school their children were attending, they could switch and districts would pay for transportation. If they wanted to take advantage of free tutoring, they would have plenty of options, and districts would foot the bill.
Entrepreneurs saw their opportunity and they took it. Thousands of brand-new businesses sprung up to take advantage of the federal dollars. For-profit online corporations leapt to get into this new and lucrative market. The money for SES comes out of the district’s Title I allocation. The cost of SES soared from $375 million in 2005-06 to $970 million last year. That is quite a tempting market.
In Minnesota, more than 80 tutoring services vie for $20 million in federal funds. The most aggressive of the tutoring companies are the online for-profit operators, who pitch their wares to unwary parents. According to the article, they charge as much as $90 an hour, as compared to the nonprofits, which charge as little as $5 an hour. A lucrative business for the corporation, not so profitable for the students. At those sky-high rates, the money runs out long before the student has gained much from the “tutoring.”
The SES program has never had adequate federal or state oversight. Numerous studies concluded that the SES tutoring was ineffective. “It wasted a lot of money and a lot of people’s time,” said Steven Ross, an education professor at Johns Hopkins University who led at least 15 state studies analyzing the program. “It was inadequately funded and developed. The policies don’t work. The whole concept was a bad turn. … It turned out to be very dysfunctional.”
The article documents numerous cases of fraud, occasionally leading to termination of a company’s contract. In several instances, tutoring companies billed for sessions that never happened; typically, they recruit aggressively, but deliver subpar services to students.
As an aside, the Romney education plan envisions turning over even more money and programs to the private sector, with minimal regulation.
Why do we keep wasting money on private vendors instead of providing our public schools with the resources they need to give students intensive tutoring? At least, we would have the assurance that the services were supplied by certified teachers rather than profit-seeking amateurs.
Diane
Any comment from the Department of Ed?
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There is no proof that tutoring helps students academically anyway and there wasn’t when NCLB was created. It was a compromise between Republicans and Democrats on voucher programs. It really doesn’t matter if they are certified teachers or not. What many of these kids is out of school and experiences other kids get that their families can’t provide. More “school” isn’t it.
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There is no evidence that tutoring helps students whether it is with certified teachers or not. Personally when I hear stories of tutors playing games with kids and talking to them, I feel that they had the best judgement on what that child needed. When NCLB was being debated in Congress, the tutoring was a compromise between Democrats and Republicans regarding voucher programs. What these kids need is decent lives and things out of school that other children have, like trips, visiting museums, cultural places and going out to dinner and in the community.
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There is evidence that tutoring by businesses created to get federal dollars doesn’t work.
Tutoring is another frm of teaching, but should be smaller group, even 1:1.
No reason it can’t help kids if teachers know what they are doing.
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I am so glad I work for a corporation that doesn’t invest money just because the state tells us to. We look at programs critically, and we use teachers to tutor students after-school, not some fly by night private vendor. $90 an hour, please, that is fraud.
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Children with reading problems need to be diagnosed, then a program established for remediation for a specific problem that can be determined through test or observaton by specialists. What has happened to the Title I pull out programs in the local schools? We had specialists for both reading and math who worked one on one if needed or in small groups with children.
First, not just poor students have an academic problem. I worked with all economic levels, all IQ levels, and found when I worked with gifted students, several also had a reading and math problem. My job as the teacher was to try and get these children up to grade level as quickly as possible and then return them to their regular classroom. Sometimes it took only a short time, but sometimes children needed many hours to bring them up to their potential ability. Potential ability has been overlooked in this hoax of educational restructuring.
When I attended a meeting and some business person said every child will be reading at grade level by 1990. I raised my hand and asked: “What about little Michael”? My little Michael’s parents were both medical doctors, his sister was in gifted education, but little Michael due to a birth problem that caused brain damage was limited in IQ. Both of his parents were aware of his limitations but wanted him to function in a regular classroom as long as possible, so I modified his educational program to his level with their approval, the schools approval and the approval of the state. This worked for him!
Little Michael excelled in one thing, and that was softball! He could outrun anyone on his team, so when the feds or anyone else tell you that “all children will be reading at grade level by ?????? They are liars or totally unaware of the difference in children. This current hoax is being used to blame dedicated teachers, administrators, or professional educators at all levels. All children have their own special individual talent that should be recognized and rewarded by any civilization.
The purpose of the current propoganda is to destroy all public, religious, and private education so the money-hungry, greedy, profit making privateers can destroy the rest of our democratic society. Privatizing has already destroyed the closest representative government to the people…the local school boards. One can only ask; “What is next?”
It is apparent that no oversight was used in Wisconsin for the tutoring programs, so one can only assume the same is happening in all states. The children suffer, and the taxpayers continue to pay for fraud! I perdict that we have not seen anything yet when “choice” schools are exposed in the future.
In my opinion, the first place to start evaluation is with the government approved, New American Schools Development Corporatoin design teams. This information may be ordered from your congressman/woman. One assumes that since these design teams were government approved, then some data will be available on all eleven design teams. I’m not holding my breath waiting for the data to be made available to the public.
Diane, keep up your good work. You were associated with a “conservative” questionable groups in my opinon. The Fordham Foundation is connected to Chester Finn, Jr who is/was involved with the Edison Project that is running our public schools for profit. Diane, I’m sure you are aware of this fact. It would be interesting to know who holds stock in this company. Take care!
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I do hope the ‘mini vouchers’ (like a whole voucher, but smaller) do not create another arbitrage opportunity for shameless profiteers to milk the system.
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I have a two-year degree and a newly discovered talent fo teaching but am unable to secure a teaching position which requires a four-year degree. I’d be willing to earn a four-year degree except for the cost ,especially since I am disabled and on social security. It was while working as an ESL volunteer teaching English grammar to young latin adults aspiring to gain employment that I discovered my gift of being an effective teacher. I thoroughly enjoyed the opportunity to help these young people advance their careers and help them gain proper grammar skill during a time when proper grammar is a fading skill as evidenced by any show or commercial on TV and especially among the politicians who are currently considering reducing the educational opportunities available through elimination of pell grants, affordable loans,etc,etc.Mispronunciation is almost humorous these days especially among the British ie: In atempting to say the word conservatory, they state the sentence,”conserve a tree.” Other words with similar-ending ory,ary,etc. words suffer the same mutilation ie: territory becomes terror-tree, military becomes milli-tree and so on. Visiting almost any university website will reveal spelling or grammar errors
Although I am 67 years old, I sincerely wish to teach or tutor as needed but find the obstacles overwhelming. I continue searching nonetheless.
Should circumstances change, I would be happy to serve. Thank you.
Sincerely, Ted Bortel
e-mail: trbortel@gmail.com
ADD:3004 Princeton Drive, Plano, Texas 75075
TEL: 972-596-1506
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Well, here we are a few months later and nothing has really changed. Finally, some good teacher in Chicago took a stand for children and education. I saw a small sentence on “Schools Matter” about the Chicago teachers being opposed to teaching from a “prepared script” , but not enough was said about this in my opinion. Not enough has been said about “training”- not educating, children for the work force designed by the corporate fascist who are now in charge of not only the political parties but the total educational multi billion dollars going toward “choice” charter/voucher education. Follow the money trail and the fascist philosophy of combining tax money with private corporation funds and the vested interest foundation funds that actually profit the company involved, and we see the whole picture….at least for the informed. As a history major, I’m amazed that so few see the philosophy in the “educational restructuring” movement.
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