Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Responsibility to Learn? Responsibility to Teach!

I don't normally "cut and paste" content here. But my daughter, Joanna Frazer--a 4th grade teacher in a public school--sent me the essay that you will read below.

There has been a good bit of conversation here about "personal responsibility" and the poor. It would be nice if things were always one for one, clean and neat. This essay by Joshua Benton puts a spotlight on a systemic reality about which school children can do nothing.

Benton nails one of the major challenges facing urban, public educators.
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TAKS push not so equal

Monday, September 19, 2005
The Dallas Morning News

Sometimes it takes an outsider. Something you've seen a thousand times may seem as normal as heat in a Texas summer - until someone new stops in and points out just how wrong it is.
That's how I felt when I read an academic paper by Jennifer Booher-Jennings, a grad student at Columbia.

She spent months observing how a Texas elementary school prepared for the TAKS test. (She promised not to reveal its identity in exchange for the access.)

Her paper didn't tell me much I hadn't seen repeatedly across the state. But I'd never really stopped to think through the damage well-meaning educators can cause in pursuit of a high passing rate and a good school rating.

Here's how it worked at the school she watched. In the fall, teachers gave students a sample TAKS test. Based on the results, students were divided into three groups: passers at the top, remedial kids at the bottom and bubble kids in between. The bubble kids are the ones whose scores put them just below the state's passing standards. (That varies from grade to grade, but kids generally have to get 65 percent to 70 percent of questions right to pass the TAKS.)

The bubble kids are the ones who, with a coordinated effort, can be pushed over the passing bar. And pushing kids over that bar is everything in Texas. So how did the educators at this particular school react? By pouring all the resources they could into the bubble kids.

The bubble kids get special sessions with the school's reading specialist. The bubble kids get after-school and Saturday tutoring. The bubble kids get small-group attention in class. The bubble kids get extra reading time with librarians and the P.E. teacher. All that's great if you're a bubble kid. That extra time and attention works - those kids usually end up passing TAKS.

But what if you're one of the "remedial" kids - everyone below the bubble? You get the shaft.

Teachers aren't stupid. They realize they're going to be judged on how many of their kids pass - not how much improvement they can squeeze out of their weakest kids. So they go after the low-hanging fruit: the bubble kids.

Here are some direct quotes from the teachers Ms. Booher-Jennings interviewed:

"I guess there's supposed to be remediation for anything below [a TAKS score of] 55. But you have to figure out who to focus on in class, and I definitely focus more attention on the bubble kids."

"If you look at her score [pointing at one student's score], she's got a 25 percent. What's the point in trying to get her to grade level? It would take two years to get her to pass the test, so there's really no hope for her."

"If you have a kid who is getting a 22, even if they improve to a 40, they won't be close. But if you have a kid with a 60, well, they're in shooting range. ... Some kids are always going to be left behind, especially in this district, when we have the emphasis on the bubble kids."

As one teacher said of the remedial kids: "It's really a lost cause. They must have fallen through the cracks somehow."

These are third-graders we're talking about.

These kids are getting written off as hopeless cases before they turn 9.

Ms. Booher-Jennings only visited one school. But I've talked to dozens of teachers who do some version of the same practice. Principals call it being "data-driven." I call it an excuse to ignore the weak.

But it isn't just the weakest students who lose in this system. Bright kids, the ones schools know are going to pass, don't get much attention either. Neither do the special education kids whose scores don't count against the school, or the kids who transfer into a school after October and aren't counted for ratings either.

Here's the criminal thing about focusing so much attention on the bubble kids: All it does is make the adults look better. It makes teachers look better when their classrooms' passing rates are posted in the teacher's lounge. It makes principals look better when they get called to a meeting in the central office. It makes superintendents look better when test scores get published in the newspaper. And it makes legislators look good when the statewide passing rate marches up every year.

But does it help children when teachers are willing to pour hours into turning a 64 into a 71 - but consider moving a kid from a 31 to a 59 not worth the effort? It's the precise opposite of "no child left behind."

I hope every TAKS-giving teacher reading this asks herself a simple question: Is there anything I do for bubble kids that I don't do for weaker kids? And if the answer is yes: How can I justify that?

The final irony in Ms. Booher-Jennings' paper comes from one constant among almost all of the teachers she interviewed. They always complained about their colleagues in earlier grades. Those other teachers didn't do enough to prepare these kids when they had them, the teachers argued. Now these hopeless cases are going to lower my passing rate.

Gee, I wonder how those kids on the bottom got there? Perhaps if they'd gotten the same attention the bubble kids had, their futures wouldn't seem quite so hopeless.

5 comments:

  1. My sister teaches in Texas and knows very well the reality of the situation described here. She says that if a teacher chooses to focus on the bottom-tier students to the detriment of the TAKS, they get reprimanded by the principle.

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  2. Ouch! Having been a student, a teacher, and then a parent, this story is extremely painful to hear, even though I've known that it happens.

    Each child deserves the attention, focus, and whatever it takes to help him achieve his maximum potential, regardless of where on the continuum that potential places him.

    I've taught junior high kids who struggled to comprehend the simplest of math concepts and gifted high school juniors and seniors with almost limitless potential. As a parent of very bright kids, it was frustrating to watch teachers focus on the "bubble kids." (My term for this has always been "teaching to the middle," which leaves out both extremes.)

    How do we accomplish this when teachers are struggling with 25, 30, or more students in a classroom? I wish I knew the answers. Many years ago, students were divided into classes by ability so that each group could learn at their own level and pace. Somewhere along the line we decided that wasn't good for the self esteem. How can one teacher stretch the minds of the gifted, encourage those in the middle, and give the extra time and attention needed to the weakest, all in the space of a few short hours?

    How do we encourage parent involvement -- to encourage, motivate, be the child's advocate at school, and provide the one-on-one attention the teacher can't give? In the same year I taught the struggling junior high kids and the gifted students. At the fall Open House, out of 25 struggling students, 4 parents came. With the gifted students, the room was overflowing with parents. Had the parents of the struggling students given up in frustration long ago? What role did the degree of parent involvement play in the level of student achievement?

    Lots of questions... so few good answers...

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  3. Larry -- I think the link at the bottom of the article is pushing your sidebar information to the very bottom of the page. You might want to reset the width of the link or delete it.

    Great post today..."no child left behind" -- ha!

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  4. IBreakCellPhones,

    One reason for the high emphasis on TAKS is that federal education funds are now based on test scores. While students took tests in the past, TAKS is the first one to determine a school district's (and state's) budget, as a direct result of the "No Child Left Behind" law (which I believe left the child-advocacy group that used to have that as a slogan very displeased and embarrassed that they'd forgotten to copyright the phrase).

    I don't know if further incentivizing is the solution - tie money to any number, and people start looking more at how to achieve the number than what the number is supposed to represent, hence our current situation. However, I truly love the idea of grading on progress, and even more a set of questions that can only count positively, giving them incentive to push everyone further. Perhaps an early-year test whose results aren't released until after the later-year test? Or make the measurement the percent of the difference between the original score and perfect, so that a 90% improving to a 95% is equal to a 40% improving to a 70% (hmm, that seems a bit out of whack, but something to maintain the importance of improving even the best students - I can think of a few metrics but too detailed for this forum).

    If we set up a system that pushes for improvement and take the ceiling off how that improvement is measured, that could really set the bar where we want it. Next step is getting more of the caring and talented teachers into the classroom and helping keep them there.

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  5. IBreakCellPhones,
    Actually, I was laughing at the reference by the author in the column, not commenting on federal education law.

    Steve

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