Attention Editors of U.S. News & World Report!
Gina Caneva teaches in a high school in Chicago that received a high ranking from U.S. News & World Report, but she is not happy.
She knows the rankings are destructive nonsense. They are a fraud.
I began teaching 15 years ago at Corliss High School in the Roseland community on the Far South Side. Then and now, the school’s student body is nearly entirely African American, and 90% are termed “low income.” Currently, U.S. News and World Report states that Corliss is in between 430-647 in their rankings, CPS gives it a Level 2 rating and the Illinois Report Card designates it as a lowest performing school. Although I don’t have the numbers from 15 years ago, without a doubt these rankings would have been similar as I remember it being a school “on probation.” This meant that it could be closed.
But inside, it was neither a school on probation nor a failing school. Teachers worked together to prepare a rigorous curriculum that engaged students at many different skill levels despite lacking resources. Many students were fully present and active in their coursework. When outsiders stereotyped my students by asking, “Do they listen to you?” and “Do you just pass them through?” I told them story after story about my students reading and analyzing the nearly 600-page “Invisible Man” and writing poetry that rivaled published authors.
But there were some obstacles a rigorous curriculum and student engagement couldn’t overcome. Back in 2004, we only had one working computer lab for over 1,000 students. When we returned from winter break, bullet holes pierced our corridor windows — a glaring reminder of the violence in the neighborhood. Students had very few resources to deal with trauma or social-emotional learning as social work services were slim to none. I remember working with a student who lost her mother and younger siblings to violence over Christmas. She did not need rigorous instruction; we were ill-equipped to supply the emotional support she needed.
My second school, TEAM Englewood Community Academy, was a start-up school that opened because a low-ranked school was closed. Again, teachers and students worked diligently together to achieve district goals. Our students rarely met them, but not for lack of effort or focus. Bodies of research support the impact of poverty and segregation as legitimate factors of limited success on standardized tests. But whatever the factors were, for my students, they proved to be too much as the school would be labeled a failure. Last year, TEAM Englewood closed in much the same fashion as the school it replaced.
Presently, I teach at the 11th best ranked high school in Illinois. Lindblom teachers work diligently and are experts in their fields. We strive to provide a rigorous curriculum as much as teachers I worked with at Corliss and TEAM Englewood did. But there are two major differences at Lindblom. First, our students meet and exceed district, state and national goals. Second, they have to test in to get accepted into our school. As a selective-enrollment school, if a student does not meet the criteria of a certain score on a placement test before ninth grade, they cannot attend Lindblom. Yet our school, with our selective population, is ranked using the same measures against schools that are not selective. Simply put, the process is unfair.

Gina makes many good points but kind of blows them up in the final paragraph quoted above (3rd from last in editorial). She seems to accept the premise that she teaches “at the 11th best ranked high school in Illinois”, that “our students meet and exceed district, state and national goals”, and complains about having her students “ranked using the same measures against schools that are not selective.” While arguing against these rankings, she falls into the trap of using their language to justify her complaints. This a human problem—one of captives who internalize the language of their captors.
Victor Klemperer, whose diaries are essential for the bibliography of the Third Reich, wrote about this in LTI—lingua tertii imperii. Among his more interesting observations is how much of Nazi propaganda was based on Americanisms—an overuse of bombastic superlatives, consistent attributions of greatness and superiority, the constant use of the jargon of sports and competition, and ranking subjective, unquantifiable concepts. Ideas and language like American exceptionalism, the greatest country in the world, inane debates of which athletes from different eras are “better,” or “competitions” like the Oscar which claim to elevate various categories of film production at “best” were copied in their own way in Nazi Germany. Even the Hitlerian idea of Lebensraum, as Timothy Snyder noted in Bloodlands, found its inspiration in the American idea of Manifest Destiny. Taken together, all these Americanisms helped support the fanaticism Nazis craved and demanded of their followers. U.S. News uses the same tactics.
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Well argued, GregB! Exactly.
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Even the devil can quote scripture for his own purposes. Who said that?
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Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, Jim Bakker, Aimee Semple MacPherson, Father Coughlin? 🤣
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The Merchant of Venice, Act I, scene iii
Mark you this, Bassanio,
The devil can cite Scripture for his purpose.
An evil soul producing holy witness
Is like a villain with a smiling cheek,
A goodly apple rotten at the heart.
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Nice, Bob. I must have slept through that part of class. Musta been listening to Kris Kristofferson’s Silver Tongued Devil and I instead.
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All ranking measures unfairly target the schools of poor, minority students for takeover and so-called reform. Privatization of public schools has failed to prove it is worth over the disruption it causes. It merely transfers resources from the public domain into the private sector, often for no better results. Yet, few politicians are questioning the value of privatization as a tool of improvement because the notion is backed by wealthy individuals. This unsubstantiated process is accepted as fact. Test and punish does not improve education for the poor. It merely satisfies the goals of the 1% that want to suppress democracy and place poor, minority students in separate and unequal settings.
There are many other proven strategies that could be used to improve schools. We can invest in poor communities and provide support and wrap around services. We can also integrate schools more so that poor students are not isolated in a single under funded building or district.
When the STAAR scores came out, I had a lengthy discussion with my daughter about testing and its waste of resources and time. My daughter started looking up scores of some of the more middle class schools in the district. They, of course, had more Level 1 students, but they also had almost as many failures. While this factor made her feel better, I suggested that perhaps my grandson’s school, which is poorer, had narrowed the curriculum and replaced authentic learning with test prep. This is the problem with threats of closure looming over public schools with many poor students. Students are being denied a rich and varied education in a public school so that the school can stay afloat by making a showing on a bubble test.
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A school without stellar test scores may have many fine teachers that challenge students as this post illustrates. We should stop playing test and punish as it is a game being foisted upon public schools by billionaires. Just opt out!!! I encouraged my daughter to opt my grandson out, but she was worried the school would leave him back.
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The terrible irony at the heart of Education Reform is that the “data” on which this “data-based reform” is based is invalid and unreliable. It’s a pseudoscience. It’s like astrology or phrenology. All this would be laughable if it weren’t so tragic.
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To clarify: the referent of “it’s” above is meant to be Ed Reform. Ed Reform is a pseudoscience. It’s numerology. It’s a scam.
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YEP!
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Big article on TFA in propublica:
https://www.propublica.org/article/how-teach-for-america-evolved-into-an-arm-of-the-charter-school-movement
Can we please stop hiring people who lobby against public schools to work in public schools?
Charter schools would never do it. They wouldn’t be hiring hundreds of people who seek to REPLACE and/or ERADICATE charter schools IN charter schools.
It doesn’t make any sense for public schools to be hiring TFA. They don’t support our schools. They’re completely captured by the Walton heirs. Anti public school.
Could we try hiring people who value public schools to work IN public schools? That seems sensible, right?
Would charter schools hire employees out of an anti-charter school lobbying shop? No, they would not. So why do we? How is that fair to our students?
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If states abided by their own state certification laws, they would never allow unqualified teaching temps in their schools. The whole point of certification is to ensure teachers are minimally qualified. However, in this country, money talks. TFA managed to get waivers by bribing states to accept their teaching temp associates. The existence of TFA teachers in public schools is an affront to every teacher that became legitimately certified.
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I can see the value in ranking public schools. (And non-public schools). As a person who has worked in statistics (US Commerce Dept), the problem lies in the metrics. And the student populations vary so widely, like here in Metro WashDC. Public schools in Fairfax County, Loudoun County, and Stafford County are very good. (High SATs, high graduation rates, other objective criteria). The public schools across the river in Prince George’s County MD, and the nation’s capital, are a disaster on ice.
More important than the rankings, is what our political servants, are doing with the data. My wife is in real estate. Good schools, push up property values, because people who care about their children’s education (and do not have the financial means to go outside the public system), naturally gravitate to the neighborhoods with outstanding public schools.
The reverse is true as well. Neighborhoods with terrible public schools, are deserted by families who can desert them.
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“As a person who has worked in statistics (US Commerce Dept), the problem lies in the metrics. ”
Yes it does, Chas! Those metrics derived from standardized test results can only be invalid as proven by Noel Wilson in 1997. Using invalid data can only net one invalid conclusions/results. Why would anyone suggest using invalid data?
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i would bother to explain the fallacy in your logic if I thought you were capable of understanding it.
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Hearty chuckle
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If you see any fallacies, feel free to point them out. Good schools are in the areas which have the tax base, and the citizens who demand good schools. In areas with a depressed tax base, and an indifferent citizenry, the schools are of less quality. Who can argue with that?
Several of the respondents here, agree that flawed metrics, can result in misleading rankings for schools. Easy to see this, too.
As far as “redlining”, I am certain that it occurs. My wife has had to attend briefings, and be instructed on the open housing laws. If a realtor is openly discriminating on criteria like race, creed, color, ethnicity, etc, they are subject to prosecution.
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I can argue with that, Charles. The state has a solemn duty to provide equality of educational opportunity, not to allow gross inequities based on property value.
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You cannot argue that it does not happen. Wealthy areas with a solid tax base, can afford higher quality schools. Depressed areas, without the tax base, cannot afford to spend as much as the wealthy areas.
Kozol pointed it out in his book “Savage Inequalities”. I do not think that the state should provide equality. I think that the governments which operate public schools, should spend additional funds in depressed areas. More funds for after-school activities, nutrition, counseling, etc.
Who can argue, that depressed areas, without financial resources, should be allocated more financial resources?
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I can argue that depressed areas, with a small tax base, should get greater financial assistance from the state because the state has a constitutional obligation to provide equal educational opportunity.
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This misinformation often results labeling communities along preconceived notions of race and class. “Great Schools” is a perfect example. In real estate, the term “red lining” equals segregation. Although technically illegal, red lining is still practiced in many real estate offices today.
I agree with Duane. Flawed metrics can be misleading and harmful when the metrics are based on false assumptions or certain elements in the formulae are assigned a particular weight erroneously. Teachers know this first hand from the fake rating system, VAM.
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Yo Charles….I’m sure a lot of poor people care about their children’s education, too. In fact, I would think that education would be 3rd after food and healthcare issues.The wealthy people horde education like it’s a physical thing instead of something that should be shared by all for the greater good for everyone. And yeah, PG County schools ARE a disaster because it is the mecca of no excuses Charter schools in MD and PG Co is also the most politically corrupt county in our state.
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“O if I had the money to do more than just feed them
I’d give them good learnin, the best could be found,
So that when they grower up they’d be checkers and weighers
And not spend their life a diggin in the dark underground.”
Coal miners song from the 19th or 20th century. Recon they understood?
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Stacking school, like stacking students, is a game for fools.
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Gina understands that school choice is a problem, not a solution, “Schools are not sports teams, businesses or appliances for us to pick and choose, but they have become so because of these rankings.” Worse, the rankings give policy makers the false impression that they can pick and choose, that to make the city look good they can choose to give more resources to schools that already have them, instead of funding equitably by need. Worse still, the rankings give the false impression to policy makers that some schools should be blamed and placed on probation and taken over and shuttered and its teachers placed in the castle dungeon and poured on with boiling tar and forced to use Microsoft Windows.
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Years ago nobody rated and ranked schools or so many other things the way they do today. There was a lot less stress in the world. I blame computers and business people for the obsessive need to have a metric for everything. We should let schools and children breathe.
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But they did. Word of mouth, parents talking, local newspapers. Not as formal, of course.
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Amen. Does anyone in his or her right mind think that schools are BETTER today than they were before high-stakes standardized testing, VAM, school grading, and the Common [sic] Core [sic]? Clearly, they are not. The reasons why they aren’t are complex. They can’t be stated in a soundbite. But this can: Ed Deform has failed. It has failed UTTERLY. Put a stake in it.
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Now that we understand why grading/ranking schools is so harmful, can we please apply that to grading/ranking students? It is certainly devastating to work so hard under such conditions to make a school with hardships such as many low income students nonetheless a good school for those kids to learn. Now can we understand what D and F students must feel, many of whom work very hard against hardships of their own? If teachers don’t like to be told they are failures (and they shouldn’t), could we please stop telling students the same?
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Exactly!
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I think we addicted ourselves to grades in the 20th century. I used to attend a school whose founder opposed grades when the southern association of schools and colleges was debating their use. He preferred the process by which a student would study with him until such a time that he felt the student was ready for the next level. He would then give the student a letter he could take to the next institution. I am sure we can all find huge holes in this method, but I cannot help but grow weary of stacking students up in little piles.
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“ready for the next level” == passing grade for the previous level.
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Brilliant, dienne77 &, also, see my comment below.
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High-stakes standardized testing based on the Common [sic] Core [sic] was supposed a) to drive up test scores over time and b) to reduce achievement gaps. It has done neither. It has been an utter failure in both regards, and yet it persists.
It has great distorted and narrowed curricula in the English language arts and subjected students to mathematics instruction for which they are not prepared. Enough. 20 years of this utterly failed policy are enough.
Every parent should insist that candidates for Congress and for President of the United States be asked this question: Will you pledge to eliminate the failed national requirement for high-stakes standardized testing?
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I have never figured out how a school that gets students from the same impoverished neighborhoods are supposed to make continuous, grand improvements when no changes occur in the wider community. No matter where my students came from, they tended to come in at a certain level and exit on a more advanced level. The next year they would enter on a level similar to those from the previous year and exit at a more advanced level in the same ballpark as the students from the year before.
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Not only that, speduktr, but students consistently exposed to neighborhood/home trauma (shootings, domestic violence, shootings, poverty,shootings…you all get it) are supposed to have a “normal” life, completing school work & acing “standardized” tests?
I always found it beyond the pale that, after the trauma of Sandy Hook, students in that school were given an exemption from taking tests, yet our students who are consistently traumatized (perhaps on a daily basis), receive no mental health services nor even see a school social worker, are subjected to test prepping & testing year after year after year?
Criminal & cruel.
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Indeed!!! Well said!!!
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