Archives for the month of: September, 2012

NASA’s rover called Curiosity landed on Mars on August 5.  It is now exploring that planet, in a spectacular demonstration of space technology.

Professor Ralph E. Shaffer wondered about the team of scientists and engineers responsible for this great breakthrough. He discovered a website with bios of the 141 people involved.

He wondered, where did they go to school?

This is what he learned:

104 of the 141 were products of American public schools. The others didn’t say where they went to school or went to private school or were educated abroad.

Professor Shaffer thinks this should serve as a rebuke to the reformers who love to decry the quality of our schools.

I wish his discovery would change their minds.

Not likely, considering that one of the loudest critics is Governor Chris Christie. He is a graduate of Livingston High School in Livingston, NJ. He must have really bad memories. Maybe he was bullied.

Kenneth Bernstein regularly blogs at The Daily Kos. He is an experienced teacher with National Board Certification.

He shares his views here on test prep and testing:

For a number of years, until I decided I had ethical problems with doing so, I earned money beyond my teaching salary by teaching and later tutoring SAT prep for Princeton Review.   That company probably has more experience with preparing students for standardized tests than any company in the nation.  Thus it is probably worthwhile to note what they taught us to say about the SAT to our students:

Other than a bit of vocabulary and some ability to read questions accurately, what the SAT measures is how well you did on that version of the SAT on that day.

In other words, it did not measure how bright you were, nor how prepared for college you were (high school grades are a better a predictor of 1st year grades at .30), and SAT had little predictive relevance beyond 1st year grade and for that it had a predictive validity (R-squared) of around 22%, meaning that it predicted less than 1/4 the actual first year grades.

We hav always known there was a strong correlation between family income and SAT scores.  Princeton review courses, which were more accessible to those with more income, merely exacerbated that problem.

Now test prep companies are already moving into the business of offering courses for high stakes state tests, and once we have tests aligned to the Common Core State Standards the problem will become even worse – those with money, who will already perform better, will gain an additional advantage by being able to purchase such test preparation.

What will this tell us?  Exactly what the SATs tell us according to Princeton Review – beyond the correlation with family income, how well the testee did on that application of that test on that day.



Wherever we find signs of bravery and intelligence in education, we must celebrate it.

The school committee of Taunton, Massachusetts, took the following wise action. It

“voted unanimously to send a letter to the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education opposing the amount of testing that school districts will be required to implement with the adoption of the Common Core Standards. The School Committee also requests that someone from DESE come and explain how the district is to implement this mandate. Where would the funds come from? The training? And most importantly, discuss how this will impact time on learning.

Currently, the 50 states combined spend approximately $1.3 billion on standardized testing. This money is spent on the development, publication, administration, and scoring of standardized tests that are required by the federal government. Is that really where we want to be putting $1.3 billion of the education money targeted for our public schools?

The money could be better spent on lowering class sizes, instructional technology, and innovative ideas that our students could benefit from.”

It will take wisdom, knowledge, experience, and courage to save education in this country.

Hats off to the Taunton School Committee.

Let us find many more like them and celebrate them.

Read more: http://www.tauntongazette.com/dcover/x5489255/LETTER-The-fighting-spirit-of-the-school-committee#ixzz25EgOC0IE

I am hoping that the economist and others who comment on why poverty is “relative” and really not as bad as we think, will comment here.

Katie Osgood responded to the post “Ignoring Poverty Is Callous” with her own post:

She writes:

http://mskatiesramblings.blogspot.com/2012/09/reformers-just-dont-know.html

“As anyone who has ever read my blog knows, I work as a teacher on an inpatient psychiatric unit for children and adolescents in Chicago. I work with kids who are so sick, that they had to be hospitalized in order to keep them and those around them safe. On our unit, children and adolescents may not even have pencils unsupervised or paper clips for fear of harm.

And through my job I have seen, real and personal, the effects that poverty can have on our young people. I have seen children, with a history of abuse, placed in the foster care system, who are so sad that they bang their heads against walls, scratch their faces, and scream “I want to die.” I have seen children who get so angry-who have so little frustration tolerance due to living in unpredictable situations where they had to be in a constant “fight or flight” state to keep themselves safe on the streets-who will beat another child just for looking at them the wrong way. I have seen countless children who were exposed to substances in utero and now their brains do not work the same as their typically developing peers. These children get angry, throw chairs, scream in frustration when their needs are not met, and lash out to hurt anyone around them. I have seen these same children struggle to learn even basic letters and counting, thanks to the cognitive impairments they have. I have seen children who were homeless for most of their life, whose brains were forever damaged by the stress of their early childhood experience, who now require one to one assistance just to be able to function with a group of children. I have seen young girls, so severely depressed about growing up in our lawless inner-cities with parents overcome with drug addiction and gang affiliations, grab a bottle of cleaning fluid and try to kill themselves. I have seen child after child exposed to greater trauma on the streets of Chicago, than our soldiers in Kabul face! I have spoken with countless children who feel hopeless, who feel abandoned, whose lives are forever altered due to the rampant poverty we let them be exposed to.

Now there are things we can do to help these kids. And believe me, people like me are doing our best every day to help repair the damage done to these fragile children. The proper interventions are expensive, time-consuming, and will not work for every child. But those of us in the mental health field do what we can with the few resources we are given.

But I ask you, why do we as a society LET these beautiful children become so damaged in the first place? It is as if we are sitting back and letting a child be beaten again and again by an abusive parent, and then looking the other way. The education reformers out there are saying “sorry you got beat, here are some chants and gimmicks that will help you catch up academically”. We tell the kids to “work hard, be nice” as if that were enough. And if some kids can’t just “get over” the massive abuse done to them, then they clearly are at fault and don’t deserve quality education. God forbid kids, after being exposed to all types of trauma and then coming to an understanding of the savage inequalities of their lives, don’t want to just “be nice”.

As poverty in this country deepens, we are seeing more and more kids with even more debilitating disabilities. Insurance agencies are shortening the amount of time these kids are allowed to heal in hospitals like mine. Add to that cuts in mental health services, child and protective services, and the schools that serve these children, and these kids are being doubly abused.

For too many of these children, if their families had not been battling the weight of deep poverty, they would not be sick. Let me say that again, if these kids had not been born into extreme poverty, they would not be screaming, gouging their skin, threatening harm, crying every night, and put into a hospital. It is unconscionable to allow these children to continue to be put in harm’s way. Every penny we have should be thrown into prevention, not just in helping after the abuse has already happened.”

UPDATE: Several members of the Indiana Tea Party have written to say that they oppose Tony Bennett because of his support for Common Core standards. Jeb Bush supports Common Core, so of course, Tony Bennett supports them. And so do the Jeb Bush “Chiefs for Change.” But the Tea Party does not! Read the comments. The Tea Party supports local control.

So, let’s say that Tony Bennett’s desire to take control of local districts is just a power grab by a far-right politician.

Tony Bennett (not the singer) is State Commissioner of Education in Indiana.

He follows the ALEC/Jeb Bush script in everything he does.

Vouchers, charters, reducing or eliminating standards to become a teacher, for-profit schools, for-profit online “schools.”

Whatever ALEC wants, Bennett delivers.

He recently announced that he wants the power to take control of entire school districts, if in his judgement they are failing.

He says he believes in local control. He doesn’t.

He believes in power.

He believes in privatization.

Thats part of the ALEC script too.

A reader discovered the agenda for a big conference of equity investors, technology corporations, and supportive foundations.

A high-level official of the U.S. Department of Education will be there too.

Folks, read the agenda.

Public education is up for grabs.

Lots of corporations are licking their chops.

This is scary.

Remember reading about “the Great Barbecue,” in the late nineteenth century?

That’s when greedy men plundered the public treasury. .

Are the public schools now on the spit?

So much money, all guaranteed by the government.

Now we will see how entrepreneurs reform our schools and get rich too.

The reader writes:

Yep, there’s money to be made . . .

and Jeb is there to give the April 18th keynote . . .

Check out this agenda for the 2013 Education Summit in Arizona.
http://edinnovation.asu.edu/accommodations/

The April 17th panel at 4:35 p.m. will include Ron Packard (of K12 Inc.) and other profiteers discussing, “A Class of Their Own: From Seed to Scale in a Decade: What Does it take for an Education Company to Reach $$$1Billion?”

Check out the who’s who list of CEOs and their elected friends networking to the online charter school profits. The Trojan horse philanthropists , Gates and Milken, will be there too.http://edinnovation.asu.edu

I wonder what they will discuss in the session . . . .
“The Fall of the Wall: Capital Flows to Education: What sectors and companies are attracting investment?”

Margaret Thatcher may have been a milk snatcher . . but don’t let Jeb fool you, he is poised to take it all . . and give it to his CEO buddies.

This teacher says that, for him, teaching is a “labor of love.”

Can it be measured by standardized tests?

Can his value be reduced to a number, fed into a data storage warehouse and crunched?

The tests measure one aspect of what students have learned.

Only one.

The tests do not measure everything that was taught, or everything that matters.

They are limited instruments, not designed to measure the worth of students or teachers.

A reader comments:

I believe an excellent education can make a difference to children living in poverty, but it is insufficient. As one writer said in response to a previous posting on this blog, to say that good teachers can “solve” poverty trivializes the hardships that poor children endure. It’s like saying something like this to a child living in poverty: You have an excellent teacher so it doesn’t matter that you are hungry. It doesn’t matter that you live in a shelter or a run-down apartment. The fact that there are gangs in your neighborhood doesn’t matter either. Ignore the fact that you sometimes hear shots fired or witness violence. If you get sick, don’t worry about not seeing a doctor. You’ll probably feel better eventually. It also doesn’t matter that your teeth hurt, and you have never visited a dentist. I know you are tired from caring for your younger siblings, and you can’t ask mom for help with your homework till she gets home from the late shift. None of that matters. You have an excellent teacher at school! Isn’t that enough?

Daniel Akst writes editorials for Newsday, the Long Island, New York daily.

He just wrote an excellent editorial.

Long island has some great schools that are the heart of their community.

It also has pockets of poverty.

This wise editorial educates the public.

Are American schools the best in the world? The answer is a resounding maybe — which is good news indeed for this back-to-school season.

Beating up on public education is practically our national sport. I often do it myself. But overlooked in the ongoing assault is strong evidence that U.S. schools actually are worldbeaters — except for the problem of poverty.

When it comes to reading, in fact, our schools may well be the best in the world. As Stanford University education professor Linda Darling-Hammond points out, U.S. 15-year olds in schools with fewer than 10 percent of kids eligible for free or cut-rate lunch “score first in the world in reading, outperforming even the famously excellent Finns.”

This 10 percent threshold is significant because, in high achieving countries such as Finland, few schools have more poor kids than that. In other words, if you look at American schools that compare socioeconomically, we’re doing great.

But wait, it gets better. U.S. schools where fewer than 25 percent are impoverished (by the same lunch measure) beat all 34 of the relatively affluent countries studied except South Korea and Finland. U.S. schools where 25 to 50 percent of students were poor still beat most other countries.

These results are from the 2009 Programme for International Student Assessment, a widely followed effort to compare educational outcomes. PISA scores inspire a good deal of hand-wringing in this country — overall, we were 14th in reading — but I suspect we’ve been taking away the wrong message by not adjusting for poverty.

That’s odd, because most people know there’s a connection between poor families and poor school performance. The link is reflected in various sources, including the SAT, the National Assessment of Educational Progress, and the Trends in International Math and Science Study.

So the connection, which exists in most countries, is clear. But somehow the implications haven’t been, and now that school is again upon us, it’s worth thinking this through. If American kids who aren’t poor are doing so well, maybe our problem isn’t bad teachers or inadequate school spending or indifferent parents or screen-besotted children. Maybe the problem is simply poverty — and the shameful fact that we have so much more of it than any comparable country.

How much child poverty are we living with? A study this year by UNICEF found a U.S. child poverty rate of 23.1 percent — way beyond any other economically advanced nation except Romania. In Spain, which is in a depression, the figure was 17.1 percent. In Canada it was 13.3. In Finland, 5.3.

If poverty is the problem, families in middle-class school districts needn’t worry much about their kids’ schools. But they should be worried about the society in which they live, for even if we have hearts of stone, we do not have heads made of the same material. Economic growth — to say nothing of a healthy democracy — depends on an educated citizenry, and we cannot afford to let a large segment of the populace embark on adulthood seriously underschooled.

Some education reformers, such as Diane Ravitch, understand poverty’s effects on our schools. Geoffrey Canada has launched the Harlem Children’s Zone Project to provide poor children with a comprehensive set of programs addressing both poverty and education. It’s an effort well worth watching.

If the problem with education in this country really is poverty, it will not be easy to fix. Yet that is no reason for kidding ourselves about what’s actually wrong.

A few days ago, I started honoring people who defend public education and teachers against reckless assaults on them. One of the first of those on the honor roll was Lottie Beebe, an elected member of the Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education.

Here is her response.

***************

Diane, you are my hero.  Thank you for your untiring efforts to keep everyone informed of what is happening in Louisiana.  We must continue to be vocal and strive to educate the public to the truth regarding education reform.  I think your latest effort is remarkable! I think it is a wonderful idea to recognize those who stand up for students and traditonal public schools. I hope your list is infinite. 

Again, let me say I decided to seek the BESE position because of my desire to see positive changes in the education profession–contrary to the train wreck that is destined to occur.  I attended a National Association of State School Boards’ meeting in Washington, DC in July and had the opportunity to hear a speaker say the following:  No state should implement a teacher evaluation program with a 50% value added component–particularly, with the roll out of the Common Core (CC) curriculum.  He specifically stated there will be a decline in student achievement due to the rigor of the (CC). Consequently, there will be a greater number of teachers who will receive an ineffective rating. What are we doing in Louisiana? (50% Value-Added)  

To add insult to injury, we are rolling out the teacher evaluation program statewide without a full year of piloting.  My school district was one of nine participating school districts and the rubric used during the 4 month pilot was scrapped for another.  Using a quote from another state–New York–“we are building the plane as we fly it!”  Make no mistake about it, I  am not anti-teacher evaluations.  Teacher evaluations have been in place for years in Louisiana; however, a few districts neglected to evaluate annually. This fact was used during the 2012 Louisiana Legislative session to garner support for education reform and to vilify teachers, in my opinion.  

During my participation at the National Association of State Boards of Education, I was amazed to hear another presenter mention  the year, 2014, will likely be education’s Armaggedon–“eduggedon” or edu–cliff.  I agree with this assessment due to the likely decline in student achievement, increased teacher ineffective ratings, and the negative campaign against educators and traditional schools.

This reform movement is, by design, to dismantle tradional public schools and the aforementioned prediction is what will likely convince many that our traditional schools are dismal failures.  We must continue our efforts to educate the public and do everything we can to promote excellence.  When our students succeed, we must celebrate and publicize their success. There are many outstanding traditional schools in this country and Louisiana. As a grandparent of two grandsons enrolled in Louisiana’s public schools, I can proudly say they are receiving a quality education at  C rated schools which are deemed failing by Louisiana’s standards.  (Somebody, please tell me when did a C become a failing grade?) Someone obviously lied to me!  I was always told a C grade was average. 

Thanks to all who responded to Diane’s call.  I truly appreciate the emails!  I also want to publicly express my gratitude to Ms. Carolyn Hill, my BESE colleague. I want to publicly thank the members of the Louisiana Legislature who had the intestinal fortitude to stand up to ALEC and the governor –those who voted against Act 1 and Act 2–Choice. Often, criticism is generically stated; yet, there are many legislators who did not drink the Kool-aid. On behalf of Louisiana’s educators, I want to thank them.  Thanks to all of the other courageous educators who stand before our students each day providing a valuable service–educating and molding our future!  

Lottie P. Beebe, District 3
Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education 
lottieb@cox.net