On educational inequality: whose fault is it?

Recently Joy Resmovits of HuffPo wrote an article implying or stating that students in high-poverty schools did worse because they were assigned inferior teachers.

I would like to turn the cause-and-effect around: teachers in high-poverty schools get lower scores on VAM or structured observations because their students were much less cooperative and receptive to the official curriculum and come to school less often and are in general much harder to teach.

Having taught in nearly every quadrant of DC, and in high-and low- poverty schools; having my own tw children go through DCPS from K-12; having a wife who teaches in a DC public school that is rapidly changing complexion; having a mother (now deceased) who was an itinerant DCPS art teacher in the 1960s; and having attended JHS here too myself, half a century ago, i know more about the DCPS system than many.

I had my weaknesses as a teacher, but I had my strengths as well. I hope my former students can forgive my weaknesses and that they learned to appreciate more and different math with me than they would have otherwise. My competitive MathCounts teams at two DC middle or junior high schools generally did well to very well; we were always competitive with places like Maret, Sidwell Friends, St Alban’s and so on. Sometimes the other schools private or public were #1 and sometimes we were #1. It depended on the year, and what our top “recruits” were like.

Which brings me to let you in on a secret that all sports teams know: the coach, while important, doesn’t control everything. The players control the game, because they are not robots. In other words, a team that is shorter, flabbier, weaker and has less motivation and slower reflexes and game skill is always going to lose to an opponent that is taller, more coordinated, more mature, fitter, and more eager to win.

This is true in any field, though you might want to change some of the descriptive words.

Otoh, schools are not mostly supposed to be about competition. They really should be about raising the level of even our weakest children, however you might define that. They need extra help, and Are often denied it. They do not need to be put into classes of 50-100 students and a single teacher straight out of college, as famously prescribed by NYC mayor Bloomberg.

Otoh, a coach has the luxury of having a much smaller pupil to adult ratio than any public school teacher, and also unlimited time and the benefit of motivated students; thus, a coach in fact has much more influence than a teacher who meets 5 classes of 30 kids for 48 minutes a day for 36 weeks…

So here’s the secret: it is MUCH harder to teach in a high-poverty setting and with remedial atudents than it is with advanced students. I’ve had both, often during the same year.

With the advanced kids, all you have to do is come up with interesting and creative ways of presenting the material and to invite them to dive in deeper: they love it!!

With more remedial kids, with poorer kids, you soon realize that there are lots and lots of reasons why these kids might be behind. For example, some kids might be from a country like El Salvador where public education is really not universal at all, poor kids barely went to school and girls almost never if they cost money to send. Other kids are getting over seeing a parent arrested, repeatedly, or sent to jail for long periods of time, or worse. You need to be a deep psychiatrist and psychologist and understand what is and isn’t appropriate developmental stages at age 3, or 4, or 5, and so on; be able to recognize signs of depression or abuse or bullying or schizophrenia or nearsightedness or deafness or dyslexia… And learn all about cultural norm in a sicuety that you probably werent raised in. and learn how ro deal calmly with energency adter interruption after crisus after humiliation after petty bureacratic harrassment.

It takes much longer than 2 years, believe me.

And just think: just how useful is all that we learn? Have you ever asked an engineer (yes, engineer!!) how often he or she uses all that calculus he/she learned in college, on their job? I bet the answer is, NEVER. Kids have a right to be suspicious of the standard curriculum, which includes calculus as the be-all and end-all of our math curriculum.

Me? I love calculus and rejoice when I can find a use for it and solve a problem. But I’m a weirdo. As my readers undoubtedly know. Yes, I love showing it and other math stuff, getting them to another few steps in math.

But I hope I’m wise enough to know that not everybody needs to know all that. Why does every single barber, plumber, janitor, truck driver, repairman, computer programmer, nurse or doctor need to be familiar with the exact sme works of literature AND also learn integral calculus? As is implied by the Common Core Gates Curriculum?

I mean, there is too much to learn in our age. When this country was founded, a single (wealthy) person (with servants or slaves and therefire wuth plenty of leisure time) could in fact learn all of the math or physics or chemistry that was known at that era.

Today? Forget it! No one scientist in any one specialty of one science can understand much of what’s being done in another specialty of the same science! Nonetheless, we have gone in a century from an era when many adults couldn’t even sign their names, to a period where – believe it or not – average IQ scores keep rising steadily * and the number of passing AP scores for HS 11th and 12th graders keeps rising faster and faster every year.

When I stated teaching 7th grade math in SE DC in 1978, I had quite a few kids who could not add or subtract if any carrying or borrowing was involved, and could neither pronounce or write their address. Not today.
Not that we don’t have problems!! We certainly do! We can learn from other countries’ examples, both the good that we might emulate and the bad we should understand yet avoid.

Some of my former students who were born in China and later returned there told me that American teachers were infinitely better than the ones back home: we smiled, we encouraged kids, we thought if different ways to explain things, we tried to make sure every ody understood. Back home, none if that. The lesson is put in the board, the kids copy it and the dictation, and study like hell because if they flunk then they’re going back into the rice paddy or dangerous construction site or factory.

So, while this is going on, our public school systems are being sytematically desegregated, de-funded, devalued and dismantled because they aren’t producing little productive robots for factories that were long ago shipped overseas…

But I’m getting away from my point:

In my own experience, it is many times easier to teach more affluent kids than poorer kids.

And in Washington DC, nearly all of the veteran teachers have retired, died, resigned or were terminated. Over 80% of all teachers in DCPS and in the DC charters were hired and placed by the Queen of Error herself, Michelle Rhee and the bureaucracy she put in place. Joy, are you honestly saying that the corporate educational DEformers themselves somehow put all the inferior teachers in the high-poverty, highly-segregated schools of wards 5-8?

What does that argument lead to?

===============

* it has a name: The Flynn Effect.

Published in: on August 28, 2013 at 6:42 pm  Comments (4)  
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Just received: “Reign of Error” by Diane Ravitch!!

Just received my copy of Diane Ravitch’s book!! Doesn’t officially get published until 9-17-13, i think she wrote on her blog.

Let me say that DR does an extremely good job of keeping up with the educational nonsense being peddled by some of her old friends and associates in today’s bipartisan, fully billionaire-led AstroTurf movement to destroy and resegregate our public school while profiting mightily.

I highly recommend subscribing to her blog. She is amazingly productive. I do not think she has much time in her life for anything except blogging. I blog and write a fair amount, but I cannot put out a single post each day–it takes time, and I am very appreciative of her writings. She puts out up to ten posts a day!! Wow!!

When I started writing my DC-based blog back in mid-2009, after I retired, and began researching more of the plain facts here on the ground in Washington under michelle Rhee’s initial “Reign of Error”, it was pretty lonely.

I was nonetheless able to find the original records showing that a very large fraction of the very detailed statements on Michelle Rhee’s official public résumé were 100% fictitious.

I was able to show that Rhee’s policies in many, many areas while she waschancellor here in my hometown have produced exactly NONE of the miraculous gains that she predicted. And while she at one point boasted very confidently of her ability to pick winning principals in a 5-minute I yet view, she later admitted that this was in fact one of the worst aspects of her legacy. And the Harvard whiz kid measuring the effects of her attempt to purchase good behavior fr middle schools produced results no different from not doing so; and when the same academic (Roland Frye) studied Rhee’s vaunted merit pay in other cities, he found it made no difference either.

I was able to show that there was almost no effect on test scores (almost the ONLY way to test educational outcomes in her eyes) from switching out principals and teachers.

Now I find I can relax a bit. There are literally hundreds of bloggers and columnists making much of the same points I was making. I don’t feel so lonely any more.

Thank you, Diane and all of the other bloggers!!

Unlike some, I will read at least most of her latest book before writing a review. I predict I will like it.

Published in: on August 28, 2013 at 4:52 pm  Comments (4)  
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Weekly Roundup of Resistance to Corporate EduDeforms from Fair Test Fair

From Bob Schaeffer:
—————–/
As classroom doors open for another year of politically mandated testing overkill, grassroots assessment reform advocacy is exploding around the nation. Along with escalating criticism of the Common Core Assessments, protest actions are already underway in many states. Please send FairTest stories about your local resistance campaigns so we can share them with activists and journalists across the country. And, remember that back issues of these weekly news updates are available online at: http://fairtest.org/news

Poll Shows Public Opposes Use of Test Scores in Teacher Reviews
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-education-poll-20130821,0,6719255.story

More Than a Number: Educators on What Standardized Testing Means
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=216110302&ft=1&f=1013

Note to Test Designers: Bad Questions Are Not the Same as Hard Questions
http://www.wnyc.org/blogs/schoolbook/2013/aug/22/did-pearson-go-college/

New Challenge to Common Core Tests and Standards From Progressives
http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/08/24/3583858/for-common-core-a-new-challenge.html
Common Core Criticism Grows
http://host.madison.com/news/local/education/local_schools/as-schools-implement-common-core-controversy-arises/article_d3ad2c56-4702-5469-85aa-0358a83b6708.html
Common Core Tests Widen Achievement Gap in NY
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2013/08/26/common-core-tests-widen-achievement-gap-in-new-york/
Common Core Testing Moratorium Needed
http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_23452922/common-core-california-should-get-three-year-breather
http://laschoolreport.com/ca-getting-smarter-with-new-tests-to-probe-critical-thinking/
See FairTest Fact Sheet
http://fairtest.org/common-core-assessments-more-tests-not-much-better

Education Advocacy Groups Unite to Form New York State Allies in Public Education, Plan Initial Testing Protest
http://rethinkingtestingmidhudson.blogspot.com/2013/08/education-advocacy-groups-from-across.html

Michigan Bill Would Require Lawmakers to Take Student Tests
http://www.freep.com/article/20130823/NEWS06/308230044/Michigan-legislators-proposed-Mandatory-Public-School-Test-Validation-Act

Pennsylvania School District Officials Blast Grad Test Proposal
http://www.delcotimes.com/articles/2013/08/27/news/doc521c8bfb90060491031899.txt

Rhode Island Suspends Test Use for Teacher Evaluation
http://www.providencejournal.com/breaking-news/content/20130825-r.i.-school-official-necap-results-wont-be-used-in-grading-teachers-this-year.ece
http://www.rifuture.org/affected-parent-recaps-ed-boards-necap-discussion.html

Tennessee Parents and Educators Question Test Overuse
http://www.wbir.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=286121

Texas Officials Seek Statewide Investigation of Test Cheating
http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2013/08/26/03mct_txcheatingprobe.h33.html
Some Texas Districts Seeks to Move Beyond Multiple-Choice Tests
http://www.chron.com/opinion/outlook/article/Smith-Cain-Legislative-changes-bring-4758529.php

Misleading the Public About the State of South Carolina Education
http://atthechalkface.com/2013/08/26/misleading-the-state-of-education-zais-plays-partisan-with-school-praise/

Fight Over Pre-School Testing in DC
http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/in-dc-controversy-over-academic-testing-has-new-frontier-preschool/2013/08/24/1d958316-0bfa-11e3-9941-6711ed662e71_story.html

Schools Developing Art, Music, Gym Tests to Judge Teachers
http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2013/08/24/schools-developing-art-gym-music-tests-to-judge-teachers.html

Data Drunk: Let’s Take the Ass Out of Assessment
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/larry-strauss/student-assessment_b_3804568.html

Why Education is Not Like Medicine
http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2013/08/28/02nehring.h33.html

Let’s Not Expect Everyone to Run a 4-Minute Mile
http://www.schoolleadership20.com/m/blogpost?id=1990010%3ABlogPost%3A169299

Bob Schaeffer, Public Education Director
FairTest: National Center for Fair & Open Testing

Published in: on August 28, 2013 at 11:33 am  Leave a Comment  

Alien Civilizations on Mars Worshiped Piglets and Empanadas — Proof!

The Pig, Seahorse, and Jamaican Patty on Mars

Remember the ‘Face on Mars’ that was proof to some people (including at least one brilliant astronomer, believe it or not) that aliens who looked a lot like us made statues and monuments on mars that you could only see from above?

I HAVE PROOF NOW THAT THEY WERE WRONG. THE ALIENS DIDN’T NECESSARILY LOOK LIKE US. INSTEAD,they were probably  WERE MORE SIMILAR TO ONE OF THESE SACRED SYMBOLS:

(1) JAMAICAN BEEF OR GOAT PATTY (bottom left corner; probably not, is most likely a hoof of the following item.)

(2) Piglet from Winnie-The-Pooh or

(3) STRAIGHTENED-OUT SEA-HORSES.

EXPERTS ARE DEBATING WHICH FORCE THE ALIENS WORSHIPPED or were more similar to.

Debate will follow.

annotated images on mars

(I hope you realize that was all said with tongue firmly implanted in cheek?

(But some folks took the ‘Face on Mars’ thing seriously. That includes a DC-area astronomer who used to work for the US Naval Observatory by the name of  Tom Van Flandern. He wrote a book affirming that and many other stranger things.)

face on marsThe image above is the one that drove some people to make all the fuss. However, closer images from various orbiting cameras show the hill differently. Here is a page with lots of detail.

Piglet:

piglet

Spreadsheet for DC scores (poverty, segregation, public vs. charter)

If you want to see the spreadsheet I made and used from the District of Columbia’s Office of the State Superintendent of Education showing the links between poverty, segregation, and test scores in 2013m, you can look at it on Google Drive by employing this URL:

https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B1ZJFar_AuNBV21OazZTcEh5a0k/edit?usp=sharing

or

http://tinyurl.com/lahg74t

 

Please let me know if the link doesn’t work.

Good news – a mass protest against the current insane trends in US education

Read this link from Long Island Newsday for the details.

While I can’t really find anything objectionable in the way the Common Core Standards are written for math in grades 5-8, the way they are currently being implemented in all the districts I know of is extremely objectionable. In DCPS, for example, my former colleagues tell me that they are bound to follow a very strict  city-wide time line for each lesson, with the content of every lesson spelled out, and no alterations permitted. Plus there are numerous interim tests, each one more poorly-constructed than the last, which waste unbelievable amounts of classroom time.

The good parts of CC (at least in math) are that teachers and students are supposed to delve much more deeply into a smaller number of objectives or standards, being creative all along the line.

That deep delving and creativeness is completely negated by the strict way in which those standards are implemented and, uh, standardized.

That being said, it’s great to see a mass protest against our currently insane billionaire-led fads in education.

Again, here is the link:

http://www.newsday.com/long-island/1-500-rally-against-common-core-tests-at-comsewogue-high-school-1.5910413

Published in: on August 18, 2013 at 4:35 pm  Comments (3)  
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More on Poverty and Segregation in DC Publicly-Funded Schools

According to the educational DEformers who have seldom (or ever) tried to teach in an inner-city or rural poverty-stricken, segregated school, all one needs to do in order to ‘smash’ the ‘achievement gap’ is to fire all the veteran, unionized teachers and hire new and inexperienced but somehow ‘excellent’ college grads, close the old ‘failing’ schools, and all will be peaches and cream and light and wonderfulness.

In DC, nearly half of all students now attend charter schools.

Many of those schools remain completely segregated both by class and by race, as I have shown, just as many of the regular public schools were (and are).

Well, how do these new charter schools do?

Actually, not very much better. Certainly the millennium has not come.

I present to you three graphs that I made using the stats released by DC’s Office of the State Superintendent of Education. On the x-axis, I added the rate of poverty and the rate of segregation to produce an index that goes from 0% (impossibly un-segregated with 100 or more equally-represented ethnic groups and no kids on free and reduced-price lunch) to 200% (which means 100% black and/or hispanic and 100% eligible for free or reduced-price lunch).

On the y-axis I graphed the average of the ‘pass’ rates in math and reading.

You will see that an enormous number of schools line up on the far right-hand edge of the graph. Those are the high-poverty, highly segregated schools. Only a very small fraction of schools (both regular public and charter) are anything else.

This graph is for ALL publicly-funded schools, both regular and charter:

poverty segregation and average dc-cas proficiency rate - 2013

 

Notice that the linear correlation between segregation & poverty on the one hand, and average achievement on the other, is fairly strong and negative. R-squared is 0.49, which means that the correlation coefficient R is about 0.7.

Next, let’s look at just the DC public schools:

poverty seg + avge dccas prof - regular dc public schools only

 

You will notice that the correlation is a bit higher: R-squared is 0.62, which means that R itself is nearly 0.8. Most of the high-poverty and high-segregation schools have proficiency rates between 10% and 55%.

And now let’s look at the same graph for the DC charter schools:

poverty seg + avge dccas prof - charter schools only

 

To their credit, the charter schools do appear to have a weaker correlation between my poverty&segregation index and test scores. R-squared is about 0.29, which means that R is a bit more than 0.5.

Do the charter schools seem to have some magic bullet, so that all of the schools with segregation & poverty indices of 190% or more are all scoring at the top of the charts? No way. The cluster of schools at the far right-hand end of this graph still score fairly low: between 18% and 65%, instead of between 10% and 55%.

Of course, we don’t exactly know how that happens. A difference that small can easily be obtained by rejecting incomplete applications and pushing out certain students.

You also can see that there are essentially NO charter schools with average proficiency rates over 85%, but there are ten such regular public schools.

If there are any requests to see my spreadsheet, I’ll post it as a Google Doc. Just post a comment. (Sorry, the comments button is really tiny and hard to see, but it’s under this text on your screen.)

 

Poverty, Segregation, and Test Scores in DC

While looking at the latest released NCLB test scores in Washington, DC, I was struck by the enormous number of students who are stuck in completely segregated schools, on the eve of the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington for civil rights and justice.

100% black student body and 100% of them on free or reduced-price lunches (i.e., poor) is the most obvious group of schools.

Followed by another very large group of schools that are 90-99% black & hispanic and 100% poor.

Very, very few schools have an actual mix of white, hispanic, black, and asian students.

This is true for both the regular public schools in DC and for the publicly-funded but privately-run charter schools.

Out of a  total of 181 DC schools for which I have data, 23 have ‘perfectly’ segregated student bodies — that is, every single kid is black and/or hispanic,  AND every single kid is eligible for free or reduced-price lunches.

Here is the list:

  1. Aiton Elementary
  2. Arts + Technology Public Charter
  3. Beers Elementary
  4. Burrville Elementary
  5. C. W.  Harris Elementary
  6. Center City (Congress Heights campus) Public  Charter
  7. Center City (Shaw campus) Public Charter
  8. Ferebee-Hope Elementary
  9. Garfield Elementary
  10. Howard  Road (MLK campus) Public Charter
  11. Howard Road (main campus) Public Charter
  12. Integrated Design Electronics Academy (IDEA) Public Charter
  13. Johnson Middle
  14. Martin Luther King Elementary
  15. Ludlow-Taylor Elementary
  16. Malcolm X Elementary
  17. Maya Angelou (Evans campus) Public Charter
  18. Meridian Public Charter
  19. Options Public Charter
  20. Randle Highlands Elementary
  21. Septima Clark Public Charter
  22. Simon Elementary
  23. Stanton Elementary

A Review of the Evidence Concerning Teach for America

Here is a freely downloadable study by Julian Vasquez Heilig and Su Jin Jez on the efficacy (or lack thereof) of Teach for America.

It has been said that what TFA gives as ‘evidence’ is “one unverifiable anecdote after another”.

Hopefully, this study is more than that. Here is a quote from the introduction:

Research on the impact of TFA teachers produces a mixed picture, with results affected by the experience level of the TFA teachers and the group of teachers with whom they are compared. Studies have found that, when the comparison group is other teachers in the same schools who are less likely to be certified or traditionally prepared, novice TFA teachers perform equivalently, and experienced TFA teachers perform comparably in raising reading scores and a bit better in raising math scores.

The question for most districts, however, is whether TFA teachers do as well as or  better than credentialed non-TFA teachers with whom school districts aim to staff  their schools. On this question, studies indicate that the students of novice TFA  teachers perform significantly less well in reading and mathematics than those of  credentialed beginning teachers.

Experience has a positive effect for both TFA and non-TFA teachers. Most studies find that the relatively few TFA teachers who stay long enough to become  fully credentialed (typically after two years) appear to do about as well as other  similarly experienced credentialed teachers in teaching reading; they do as well  as, and sometimes better than, that comparison group in teaching mathematics.

However, since more than 50% of TFA teachers leave after two years, and more  than 80% leave after three years, it is  impossible to know whether these more positive findings for experienced recruits result from additional training and experience or from attrition of TFA teachers who may be less effective

Published in: on August 12, 2013 at 10:29 am  Leave a Comment  
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Chile: what market privatized education looks like

If you want to see where the American educational system is heading, look at Chile.

The system there was set up by Milton Friedman under the military dictatorship 1973-1990 and continues today.

When you look at the Chilean system, it’s scary — if you believe that government is supposed to help the majority of the people (as opposed to the wealthy few).

Diane Ravitch is running a 3-part series by Professor Mario Wassbluth about Chile. It’s chilling reading.

Chile: The Most Pro-Market School System in the World, Part 1

Published in: on August 12, 2013 at 7:56 am  Comments (2)  
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