Yes, we do know the secret of getting high test scores!

Exclude the kids who might get low scores.

Kick out the kids who do get low scores.

Only strivers need apply. Only strivers will be admitted.

It is the formula for a miracle school!

All children get high scores!

All children (who weren’t kicked out) graduate and go to college!

This s the golden dream of Race to the Top.

Cull the best, forget the rest!

Chentcher writes:

“Edweek has closed the comments on Bridging Differences!

On this very topic, Petrilli wrote a column today defending policies that “dump” the vast majority of inferior, undeserving needy students. He calls on today’s reformers to establish a mercilessly demanding environment like the one that once allowed a few exceptional, highly motivated and “deserving” negro students a straight and narrow path upward:
“Though relegated to second-class status and stifled at every turn, Dunbar produced a coterie of graduates that the most elite schools in the country would envy. Doctors, lawyers, Ivy League professors, generals, and titans of business all graced and were graced by Dunbar’s faculty and community.”

After waxing nostalgic for the Golden Age of segregation, Petrilli actually wrote these words:

“And this, of course, was in the Jim Crow era.
Dunbar later became a regular, de-tracked, “comprehensive” high school–and started its long slide. Would anyone argue that Washington, D.C., is better off as a result?”

http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/Bridging-Differences/2013/10/the_especially_deserving_poor.html

I just want to say, with all my heart, yes. Please consider all that rose up, among the generations of “undeserving” poor children who gained access to our public schools. I want to say, a promise has been made that can’t be called back.

Anthony Cody has written a column in response, “Social Darwinism in the Gilded Age”
http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/living-in-dialogue/2013/10/social_darwinism_resurrected_f.html

Comments have been closed on Cody’s blog, also! Diane, please link his column, and write about this where we can discuss it.”