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NCLB: Schools find no help in carrots and sticks.

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LWolf Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-11-03 09:33 AM
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NCLB: Schools find no help in carrots and sticks.
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/opinion/la-oe-oakes8aug08,1,945484.story?coll=la-news-comment>Letters

For years, observers had suspected that increasing numbers of dropouts lay behind the Texas school-reform "miracle." After all, when the lowest-achieving students are excluded, the school's test score averages climb.

Texas officials now have reclassified nearly 3,000 Houston students as dropouts, and the cheating schools face demotion from their prized state ratings as "exemplary" or "recognized" to "academically unacceptable."

The Houston school district has been held up as a paragon of accountability. It is the school system that propelled former Supt. Rod Paige to his current position as U.S. secretary of Education. The district was the urban role model for George Bush's "no child left behind" legislation that now determines federal education funding for poor children. It was named the best American big-city district and was the winner of the Los Angeles-based Broad Foundation's $500,000 prize, the "proof" — trumpeted in Sacramento — that test-based teaching and accountability would close the achievement gap.

Paige raised Houston's test scores 20% and cut the dropout rate by half, and now we know how. The pressure on Houston school officials to cook the books was palpable. Under Paige's leadership, principals "agreed" to forfeit their job security in return for higher-paying performance contracts. That meant, lose your job — no questions asked — if you don't raise test scores and lower dropout rates.


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salin Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-11-03 11:52 AM
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1. The author is a very well respected
ed researcher has long focused on both equality of educational opportunties and equity of educational outcomes.
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LWolf Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-11-03 10:47 PM
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2. Yes.
I'm sorry it's taken so long to start seeing this in the media. I keep forgetting NCLB is relatively new; it's been going on here a the state level for a decade; Pete Wilson's plan for education.
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LWolf Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-14-03 07:27 AM
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3. Readers respond: Testing Children Rather Than Teaching Them
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/letters/la-le-gelber12.1aug12,1,1834063.story?coll=la-news-comment-letters

Re "Schools Find No Help in Carrots and Sticks," Commentary, Aug. 8: Thank you for helping to shed some light on the pitfalls of the "leave no child behind" policies. As a second-grade teacher enmeshed in the school policies and attempting to teach children, I struggle to aid all children in meeting the standards, knowing full well that vast numbers of children with a variety of learning styles are, in fact, being left behind.

Children are being sacrificed in the name of "improved" education. As teachers and parents, we are cognizant of the fact that what is being passed on to us is politically and monetarily motivated and simply not motivated by the needs of children. We must begin to mobilize and contact our state politicians by mail, e-mail and phone calls. People like the chair of the Assembly Education Committee, Assemblywoman Jackie Goldberg (D-Los Angeles), and Jack O'Connell, state superintendent of public instruction, need to hear and understand the personal effects that these policies are having on our children.


And more:

After seven years of teaching English and journalism at Rosemead High School, my alma mater, I see education suffering from an all-consuming culture of test-taking. In these past several years I have administered and/or prepared my students for such tests as TAP, STAR, SAT I & II, ACT, CAHSEE, GSE and AP, many of which have been discarded or revamped due to the swinging pendulum of fickle education theory. Because administration is under immense pressure to show constant improvements in test scores, teachers and students alike find themselves in an unhealthy and pressure-filled competition that loses its focus on learning. As state content standards have become the priority, I find myself with far less time to teach the ideas in the literature and push the kids to think critically.

Either the student becomes a test-taking savant or he or she is forced to the periphery and reclassified, or worse. I became a teacher in order to be a positive force in the lives and development of the children who sit in the very same classrooms I did just a decade or so ago. What I am becoming instead is a Pavlovian automaton ringing bells to see how well the salivating students perform on Scantron tests.



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