Erich Martel, a social studies teacher in the D.C. public schools, reacted to the article in the Wall Street Journal about credit recovery.
He writes:
Thanks to Caleb Rossiter for bringing up the issue of credit recovery in the DC Public Schools.
This crime against students and teachers (students tell teachers, “I don’t have to attend your class. I’m in credit recovery.”) was introduced by Michelle Rhee. One of its features is “there will be no traditional homework.”
In 2008-09, as many as 2/3 of dcps students were enrolled in CR classes. They were allowed to enroll late (the course hours are already only 2/3 the length of a regular credit class.). Some CR teachers had 4 and 5 different subjects assigned to them during the same class period. Students who had never failed a subject were allowed to “recover” credit.
I wrote the following description of credit recovery in September 2010 on the Fordham Institute’s Education Gadfly site: http://tinyurl.com/czcbufr
“A” for effort shouldn’t count
Erich Martel / September 16, 2010
http://www.edexcellence.net/commentary/education-gadfly-weekly/2010/september-16/a-for-effort-shouldnt-count.html.
In the District of Columbia Public Schools, where I teach social studies, “credit recovery” (CR) is a program of after-school courses for high school students who have failed the same classes during the regular school day. CR enables these pupils to receive credit towards graduation; but the “recovery” courses have distinctly lower standards than the standard kind. As a result, any increase in graduation numbers achieved through this means may well yield a false impression of improved student learning.
The ideas behind credit recovery are nothing new; for decades school systems have offered summer and night programs where students can pass courses while—often—doing less work. Credit recovery is simply the latest incarnation of this approach. And it’s not just taking hold in the nation’s capital; CR programs are being launched all around the country and enrollment is booming. But these efforts haven’t been scrutinized for evidence that students are actually meeting the same standards that “regular” courses would demand of them.
In many public school systems, including DCPS, students who fail key high-school courses such as Algebra I or English 2 are scheduled into double periods to give them additional time to master challenging subject matter. Credit recovery does the opposite; it creates separate credit bearing courses, but with 25 to 40 percent fewer scheduled classroom hours. A typical two-semester course (1.0 Carnegie unit) offered during the regular school day in most DCPS high schools is scheduled for 120 to 135 seat hours. In credit recovery, meanwhile, the total number of teacher-student contact hours is eighty-two to ninety-two hours. (Contact hours are important, especially given that most of the students enrolled in CR courses had deficiencies in prerequisite knowledge from the get-go. For these students, expanded—not constricted—classroom time is critical for success.) Plus, CR courses come with the additional restriction that “there will be no traditional ‘homework’ assigned in Credit Recovery. All assignments will be completed during class time.” (Emphasis mine.)*
In her October 28, 2008 “Chancellors’ Notes,” DCPS Chancellor Michelle Rhee described the expansion of CR from the previous year’s trial run of 200 students in seven high schools to “over 1,400 students…[in] all 16 high schools.” Enrollment was open to all students, grades 9 through 12, including many with no lost credits requiring “recovery.” By the end of that school year, easily more than twice the chancellor’s original estimate of 1,400 students had enrolled in CR. (The actual number of students who received credits under these conditions has not been reported and is difficult to estimate, since many CR teachers reported drop-out rates of more than 50 percent.)
Moreover, many CR class teachers were assigned courses they were not certified to teach. During the past two school years, students enrolled in different subjects were assigned to one teacher and grouped in a single classroom. In some cases, non-instructional staff members, such as counselors, were assigned to “teach” CR classes. The clear expectation of school officials responsible for these assignments was that students would spend most of their time completing work sheets with little active teacher instruction.
Many students were simultaneously enrolled in two courses, even though one is the pre-requisite for the other, as in math, Spanish, and French. Some students, mainly ELL/ESOL, were enrolled in as many as three English courses at the same time. CR teachers reported a range of direct and indirect pressure by administrators to pass students enrolled in these courses despite failing grades, extensive absences, and late enrollment.
In my experience, CR as practiced in DCPS leads to a decline in actual student learning, teacher morale, and institutional integrity. It certainly mitigates against high standards. When some of our most academically challenged students are offered shortcuts that allow them to receive course credits for only partial content mastery, knowledge and the work ethic on which it is founded are devalued. Like ancient gilded lead coins, each recipient of CR credits is deceived with an inflated sense of achievement, which will burst the moment he or she learns that full college acceptance is conditional upon completion of remedial, non-credit courses.
This is, of course, completely consistent with the lamentable pattern of giving kids diplomas that purport to attest to achievement and readiness but actually do nothing of the sort—which is arguably the origin of standards-based reform and external accountability in U.S. education going back to the flurry of high school graduation tests that started in the 1970s.
Simply put, credit recovery, in Washington, D.C. and elsewhere, makes a mockery of local and national efforts to improve our country’s knowledge base.
* This no-homework clause was listed on a 2007 version of the DCPS website as one in a series of bulleted “details” about credit recovery
Erich Martel is a social studies teacher in the District of Columbia Public Schools and serves on the Executive Board of the Washington Teachers Union. He can be reached at ehmartel@starpower.net.

What else would you expect from the people who brought you Credit Default Swaps?
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Click on the comments and it says the page does not exist. Interesting since I just saw it today.
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Noticeably absent from this blog is any reaction th the events in Michigan yesterday. Right to Work was signed into law. It doesnnt get rid of unions, cut any benefits, or limit collective bargaining. All it does is give people the freedom to choose whether or not to join a union. So the teachers called in sick so they could protest agsinst freedom, thus leaving 26,000 children and their families tio figure out what to do during the day. The union bosses and their useful idiot members want people to be forced to join unions and have their dues deducted from paychecks.
The protesting teachers and other union hacks attacked a tent with women and children in it and punched a reporter in the face, breaking his tooth. They made death threats to the governor and legislature in the most horrible, vulgar language.
All I can say is, no parent in his right mind should send his children to public school to learn social skills from these people.
In France, a teacher was suspended for giving homework assignment to 13 year old student to wrote suicide notes, including how much they loathe themselves. He shouldn’t be suspended, he should be arrested.
Report on that instead of clobbering people (figuratively and literaly) for wanting school choice. Quit picking on online schools. Overall, they have been successful and have helped children with autism and attention-distraction problems.
Why don’t you focus on trying to be better teachers instead of bullying those who defend their rights to choose a better way for their children abd grandchildren.
Your biggest problem with charter/online schools is that most, if not all of the teachers are not unionized.
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First, if you want to be taken seriously about what the “protesting teachers and other union hacks”, you really should include a link to a reputable source.
Second, I don’t think anyone really has any problem with “the freedom to choose whether or not to join a union”. The problem is that people who don’t want to join the union (i.e., pay the dues) still want all the benefits negotiated by the union – pay, hours, conditions, due process, etc. Any teacher (or other worker) who thinks s/he’d be better off without a union should be allowed to opt out, provided s/he has to negotiate all his/her own terms of employment independently. Even state and national laws such as minimum wage should be off the table for those workers, since they too were forced through by unions. Then everyone complaining about unions will be able to see just how kind-hearted and benevolent corporations and employers are without unions and union-backed laws to force their hands.
BTW, just curious how is France relevant to this discussion?
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Argh. I mean, “about what the “protesting teachers and other union hacks” *allegedly did*….” Sorry.
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Yes, I do believe that’s what this blog is all about. Union appologists. Please prove me wrong, I do not delight if I’m right in this.
I believe that if the online charter schools that use K12, Inc.’s curriculum had un ionized teachers, you’d be just fine with them. And any other charter school and say it, “voucher! voucher! voucher” program, had all the teachers involved unionized, you would support them.
This blog exposes charter schools that mismanage funds (some public schools do to, sometimes dishonest people figure out how to do that). And there is that chain of charter schools run by Pakistanis that are controversial and have some preoblems, but they do have a most amazing Math and Science program with the results to show it. Some charter schools fail, but I believe many of them succeed with good results, else why are there waiting lists?
Absent from this blog are they many more failing public schools. For example, in some MI districts (incidentally, its trachers were among the protesters, yesterday), Only 7% of 8th graders are on level for literacy. And it’s even lower for Math. Not all public schools are failing, but there are enough across the country to raiise concern. Chicago public schools (where they had that strike a couple of months ago) have terrible literacy and Math rates among the students. And the teachers’ union was striking because they didn’t want to be evaluated
I know it’s not 100% the teachers’ fault for the low scores, but realistically, one can’t blame school reformers as they try to find a better way. Sometimes they make it worse, sometimes they make it better. It’s worth trying some innovation.
My state’s districts are begging parents to volunteer in the schools to give one on one attention to the kids. Though my state doesn’t spend as much on education as other states, the schools generally do better, but eve these schools have gone down in quality over the years.
Parental involvement is an important key to a student’s success in school. Hey, that’s what online school and homeschool is all about. It’s worth pursuing.
Now, I don’t mind being wrong. But I repeat that this blog would be more complimenatry of online schools, etc., if theonline teachers were unionized. And would be more complimentary of “corporate school reformers,” if these reformers would stop talking about how schools would improve if the teachers’ unions were abolished.
That’s why you had a problem with “Won’t Back Down.” And it wasn’t because of the bad acting–except for Viola Davis (who is for school choice). The teachers were portrayed in a positive light, except for one teacher in the whole school. But the union was not.
It’s all about the unions. And Michigan teachers’ union has paid you speaking fees in the past to tell them what they want to hear. N’est-ce pas, Ms. Ravitch?
Please correct me if I’m wrong.
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So, in other words, you don’t have a legitimate source for your claim about “protesting teachers and other union hacks”. You could have said that with a lot fewer words.
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There’s video of it all over YouTube. Looks like a small set of union protesters acted like yahoos, pulled a tent down, and one particular yahoo threw some roundhouses at a snotty Fox correspondent. I didn’t see any indication they were teachers, or what type of workers they were.
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Well, if it’s “all over YouTube”, then Lyn shouldn’t have any problem at all providing just one link, should she?
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No, she shouldn’t. Maybe she’s lazy. I don’t know. Here’s a link. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdHnBFEZevI
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flerper – sorry, but “I’m too lazy to support my own argument” is not a terribly credible argument. Thanks for providing the link – do you do your kids’ homework too?
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Can you support the claim that teachers should give up their right to minimum wage if they refuse to join a union? And that the minimum wage has been raised only because of unions? If so, why aren’t you supplying links like you are demanding.
Leave the politically simple-minded alone to stew in their ignorance. Your bullying isn’t making any marks for anyone. There are many, many blogs and forums, including this one, where people don’t cite their sources and other people, if interested, look it up on their own. You going after her homeschooling and children is nasty and unproductive.
Some states don’t allow workers to opt out of all but the agency fee. In Chicago, teachers could pay a lower amount to cover negotiating and other costs, but opt out of full-membership. This is how it should be. I was a full member, but I’m honestly tired of paying for union political campaigns. How much money did unions give to Obama? Money wasted, and I’m not wasting mine anymore.
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I’ll gladly correct you. Bad schools are bad schools. Online education like K12, Inc. is abysmal. Colorado is consideing pulling their charter. In Michigan, the Michigan Virtual Academy (administered by K12 Inc.) had zero students test proficient on 11th grade state math tests. That’s pretty indefensible.
You’re confusing education reform with unionization. If you read the posters, many are public school teachers in RTW states. And they disagree with the reforms promoted. You make the argument that experimentation is k and I agree. But much of this so-called experimentation is being done on a massive state-wide or national basis. Should we expose all of our children to such experiments? Maybe it would be better to do this with smaller groups and do some research to support or refute ideas.
Also, much of the backlash is against privatized for-profit education. That has nothing to do with unions. That has to do with wealthy investors generating a profit off schools, getting public money to do it and disrupting an already sufficiently functioning system.
You are making assumptions and leaps that are not linked. I’ll give you an example. Charter schools were originally conceived to experiment with different learning and teaching methods and platforms. But if you look at most inner city charters they simply add some technology and turn it into a boot camp. That’s not educational innovation in terms of personal interaction. It’s quite reactionary. But some charters are quite good. I have a friend who sits on the board of a small charter in Detroit called Covenent House. Their goal is to provide education for students who have already dropped out or who have personal circumstances (like teen pregnancy) that discouraged them from getting a diploma. They have a high dropout rate but they’re providing a decent service to an underserved population. They have non-union teachers. I’m fine with that.
The concerns here have to do with the undermining and disruption of public education to benefit people who seek to profit from the enterprise. It’s to bemoan decade-old testing that has done nothing to improve educational quality. It isn’t about protecting union teachers.
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I think you have consumed too much of the toxic kool aid being put out by the so called reformers by blaiming unions for everything wrong with education in the U.S. It appears to me that you have very little insight and understanding of the causes of poor acheivement.Shame on you for being critical of something you lack knowledge and understanding about.I suggest you be like Diane Ravitch. Base what you say on credible evidence and not here say.Too many of the so called reformers are hiding their real motives.For them it’s about money and not improving education standards outcomes.
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forgive the typos. “Ionized” teachers. ; D
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Dienne, please read the news today about yesterday’s strike and what the Right to Work law means. I know it’s asking a lot for a teacher to research things….sorry. I didn’t mean to be rude.
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I have read the news and I didn’t see anything like what you are talking about. I am asking you specifically for a valid source to document your claims. That’s what teachers do. Not that I am one, by the way.
And, yes, you’re being rude.
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You won’t need to go to a libraey and look up information on a microfilm machne. They have these new-fangled inventions now. You do habe access to the internet, I presume? The reporter put it on Youtube, his name is Crowder. Google stuff when you have a free moment. My free moment is gone, my homeschoolers await.
Funny how this blog doesn’t have as big a problem with homeschoolers (because we take no public funds for our school, therefore we do not affect the union due coffers). But we do get hassled and bullied by some of the teachers who comment saying that “homeschooling should be illegal.” But that’s about it. They can’t say anything against the results because, overall. the results a outstanding. Have a nice day.
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It always astounds me how so many people think it’s up to other people to support their claims. Seriously, it scares me that you teach homeschoolers. Is this how you teach them? Not to support their own claims? To expect others to do it for them?
I don’t know Diane’s position on homeschooling, but I for one am extremely skeptical based, as one of many examples, on what I’ve seen from you here today.
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Just google, “Michigan union strike.” It will give both positive and negative new sources. At the top is a very positive and encouraging report from a Socialist newspaper. The oneat the bottom from the Examiner, talks about striking teachers in the headlines, though many of the others discuss the teachers’ unions involvement. Unions from across the country came to support.
Because of this law being passed, “Blood will be spilt in the streets once again–” referring to a union riot in 1937
Add “crowder” now to your google search of “Michigan union strike” and you’ll get info about that. He was a Fox News contributor, of course.
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I support my claims. Will you be able to support yours?
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No, asking me to do a Google search is not supporting your claims. Providing a link, a URL, which is what I’ve repeatedly asked for, would be supporting your claims.
And what claims have I made that I need to support? I’ve made none.
BTW, I thought you had homeschoolers to attend to. Another reason I’m leary of homeschooling. Who’s keeping you “accountable”?
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France is a socialist country, and the unions (and public education) have some roots in Socialism. And stuff like that has happened here too. That’s why I shared that news about France today. Progressivism is a euphemism for Socialism. Ravitch is for Progressivism for she has mentioned it on her posts. Lamenting that the movement isn’t progressing as fast as she’d like it to.
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The law of unintended consequences strikes again. I often want to tear my hair out when I read the kneejerk, self-serving, inaccurate posts on this site. But it takes someone like you to make me remember how pro-union I actually am.
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Dienne, previous to the legislation in Michigan, if workers didn’t want to join a union, the state government would garnish their wages and give it to the union coffers. That’s called theft. Now the law is passed and people have their rights returned to them. Thousands of union supporters protested against that basic human right. It did happen. I repeat.
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No, Lyn, that’s called paying for what you get. If they allow workers (teachers or otherwise) to not join the union (i.e., not pay dues), non-dues paying workers still get the benefits negotiated by the union. It’s called freeloading.
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Not true. Do some research. If someone belonged to an union shop they paid an agency fee. They received the negotiated wages and benefits that the union bargained for. They paid for a service.
I’m guessing that Drudge Report and Fox News are your only news sources. May want to adjust that for a wider spectrum of reportage. (I hope your homeschoolers are required to assess claims and counterclaims in their assignments.)
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By the way, I’ve already said I’m fine with allowing workers to not join the union, provided that such choice comes with the requirement to negotiate your own compensation, benefits, working conditions, etc. without starting from the baseline that the union has negotiated. If you think employers would provide things like a living wage, a 40 hour week, healthcare coverage, etc. without union pressure, you haven’t been paying attention. In fact, we’re seeing less and less of those things precisely because there’s less and less union pressure.
BTW, your homeschoolers?
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Lyn, I think you need to get past your political extremism. Your politicizing education but not really talking about education. Reading your posts to this point has been interesting largely because you have one-sided views. As a Michigan teacher who belongs to a union, I taught yesterday. I don’t agree with the protestors behavior if they were violent. I don’t condone schools having sick-outs.
I also disagree with RTW. I’m choosing to register my discontent by working against politicians that promoted these laws and were disingenuous about their attitudes toward it.
Now if you really want to talk about education, and not the politics surrounding education, I’d be more interested in pursuing something further. I do, however, have massive problems with monied interests who have hired guns, most of whom have no experience with students or in a classroom that support unresearched reform in order to line their pockets with more wealth.
You are entitled to your opinions. But I have to admit that I find your views on socialism confounding since we’re here to discuss the policies that are mulled and passed regarding education. I don’t support socialism and I don’t support markets as a panacea. Ideological structures have flaws and gaps in reasoning.
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Dienne, my opinion on people sharing links to information to “support their claims,” is that people often link certain reports that will support it, while other reports will contradict the claim, so of course they would not share those links. And people usually won’t read those links anyway.
It’s better to just google it and see all the resources, reporting both sides so you get the whole picture.
Thank you for the concern over my children. My kindergartener has been tested to read on a beginning 3rd grade level. She’s on an advanced 1st grade Math level. She’s knowledgable of History, Geography, and the fine arts. They don’t even teach history in the lower grades anymore. And as for her older siblings? Well I won’t bore you, and besides, I’m not required by law to tell you. I don’t need a government to regulate or hold me accountable. My education standards for my children are much higher than the government’s.
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Man, I think I would have liked being in your homeschool. Paper writing would have been a breeze. Every foot/endnote could be the same: Look it up yourself and decide for yourself based on what you find. Never a need to support my own argument. Love it!
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Dienne, the public school system has some Socialistic roots. Study the history of public education and you’ll learn. In Michigan, non-union workers will only enjoy union benefits if the business itself is unionized.
It’s all about the money to the unions. Since MI workers no longer unwillingly have their wages garnished by the state, there will be fewer funds in the coffers. But people still have the right to join the union if tey want to. Let’s see ow this social experiment will work. If given the choice, will as many people still join the unions? If the unions are such great things, shouldn’t they be confident that people will be lining up to join? What are they afraid of?
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Lyn, the public school system has some Capitalistic roots. Study the history of public education and you’ll learn. (Hint: education for the Industrial Age). Personally, I’ll take the “Socialistic” roots anyday, as that was all about developing children to participate in a democratic society, whereas the capitalistic influences are all about turning kids into cogs to work the machinery of the corporate masters.
“In Michigan, non-union workers will only enjoy union benefits if the business itself is unionized.”
Yes, exactly. Meaning that people who refuse to join the union and who aren’t kicking into the pot are enjoying benefits negotiated by the union, which is financed by members of the union. It’s called freeloading.
“It’s all about the money to the unions.”
First, as opposed to whom? Do you think corporations are doing anything out of the goodness of their hearts? Corporations are all about the money too – they are mandated to maximize returns for their shareholders. Second, I really think you misunderstand the whole point of unions. Unions are groups of workers – individual people, who join together to collectively bargain on issues of salary, benefits, working conditions and other related things. They are not profit-making entities. Sure, there is corruption in some, probably most unions, especially among the union leadership. But the unions are there predominantly to create safe working conditions and livable wages and benefits for their members. Please do some research about what working conditions were like before unions, particularly things like child labor, hours worked per week, and safety standards (both worker safety and product safety). The corporations provided all those things because the unions forced them to, and they’ll gladly take them all away the minute they’re allowed to (which they’ve already started – look at Wal-Mart and fast food workers who have to apply for food stamps just to get by (which, by the way, is a form of government subsidy – corporate “socialism”, if you will).
“Let’s see ow this social experiment will work. If given the choice, will as many people still join the unions?”
That’s a bit like asking if, given the choice, will as many people still choose to pay for their groceries. Of course, if given the choice, people will take whatever they can get for free. Of course people won’t choose to join the union (i.e., pay union dues) if they can get the same benefits without paying the dues. But as fewer and fewer people join (i.e., pay dues), the fewer and fewer resources the union will have to negotiate, and the more salaries, benefits and safety standards will fall away. People might at that point be willing to join the union again, as they see what they’ve lost, but unfortunately, the union won’t really exist by that point and we’ll have to reinvent the wheel, which is exactly what the corporate overlords are hoping for because then they can go back to expecting 60+ hour work weeks with no overtime, benefits or safety standards.
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BTW, Lyn, since you’re so fond of Google, why don’t you Google “Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire” and Google the recent garment factory fire in Bangladesh. Hint, among the many commonalities between those two tragedies, neither garment factory was unionized.
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