
August 2006
Copyright © 2006 Queue, Inc.
á NCLB Enhancing Education Through Technology
Report
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Michael
Freeman
The
"No Child Left Behind" will never work because you cannot force all
children into the same mold. Why
does this nation think that every child needs to go to college. We are the only nation in the world
that does not provide federally funded vocational training for those who are
not college material. There will
be more children left behind than ever due to the fact that not all children
can be forced into this nations mold of what they should be and more will leave
school unprepared or will drop out due to frustration.
Tim
Yates
As
a former middle school principal, I agree wholeheartedly that the middle
schools must add rigor to the instruction. Too much "touchy-feely" stuff has been part of the
Middle School movement and these students regrettably are not ready for high
school when they arrive. It is not
good enough for the middle level teacher to help these kids feel good about
themselves (affective) if they are going to flunk their ninth grade material in
high school. What does that do for their self-esteem?
David
Godfrey
Thanks
for this report. Please continue to send it to me on a monthly basis.
Frank
McKenzie, Ph.D.
Perhaps
for middle schoolers they need to think outside the box. Knowledge alone does
not help these students function in today's world. We seem to be throwing the
baby away with the bathwater. We must meet the emotional needs of this group in
order to develop mature and well-balanced individual. When I see one of these
topics stated as more important I cringe. We need to teach the WHOLE child.
They are the future!!!
Thomas
Barbara
Dear
Colleagues:
I
read you summary of David T. Conley article in your ERP of 5/19 with
interest. The need for more
vertical integration is crucial and well stated.
I
do have one concern. Your summary
suggested everyone else should accommodate what is going on in the
colleges. Maybe the
colleges/universities need to do a bit of accommodating, too.
Regards,
Shirley
J. Hansen, Ph.D.
Sounds
to me like we are sending too many students to college and not enough to Tech
Schools.
Larry
Cunningham
A report from
The National Council on Teacher Quality
ABSTRACT
The
persistent reading struggles and failure of nearly 40 percent of all American
children, little improved over time, has led to aggressive government-funded
efforts in school districts to train veteran teachers in the science of
reading. The accumulated scientific findings of nearly 60 years of research
gained the nation's attention with the release of a number of significant
reviews and compendia of the research beginning in 1990, but most notably the
National Reading Panel report in 2000. The findings call for explicit,
systematic teaching of phonemic awareness and phonics, guided oral reading to
improve fluency, direct and indirect vocabulary building, and exposure to a
variety of reading comprehension strategies. All this attention on veteran
teachers begs the question: How are future teachers being prepared to teach
reading? In this study, the National Council on Teacher Quality makes a unique
effort to learn what aspiring teachers are taught about reading instruction.
From a randomly selected, representative sample of 72 education schools, NCTQ
reviewed 222 required reading courses, including evaluations of syllabi as well
as 226 required reading texts. Schools were scored on how well their courses
presented the core components of the science of reading. The findings are
alarming. Only 15 percent of the education schools provide future teachers with
minimal exposure to the science. Moreover, course syllabi reveal a tendency to
dismiss the scientific research in reading, continuing to espouse approaches to
reading that will not serve up to 40 percent of all children. Course texts were
equally disappointing. Only four of the 226 texts were rated as
"acceptable" for use as a general, comprehensive textbook. This
distressing trend in teacher training demands attention from federal and state
governments, professional organizations dedicated to improving and supporting
education schools, textbook publishers, and educations schools themselves. The
report closes with recommendations to ameliorate this serious failure in
adequately preparing teachers in the best practices of reading instruction.
To
see complete report please go to:
http://www.nctq.org/nctq/images/nctq_reading_study_app.pdf
For
additional copies or the full version of this study, contact:
National
Council on Teacher Quality
1225
19th Street N.W., Suite 800
Washington,
D.C. 20036
Tel
202 222-0561 Fax 202 222-0570 Web www.nctq.org
No
Child Left Behind (NCLB) requires all students to be "proficient" in
math and reading by 2014 but allows each state to determine its own level of
proficiency. Some states are leaving their citizens with a misleading
impression of their accomplishments by grading students against low standards,
while those states that have high standards may suffer by comparison.
Education
Next editors Paul E. Peterson and Frederick M. Hess first revealed this
discrepancy a year ago ("Johnny Can Read . . . in Some States,"
Education Next, summer 2005) by comparing states' passing percentages on their
math and reading tests with their passing percentages on the National
Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP). Now, the Education Next editors have
issued a new "report card" for each state.
Education
Next is a scholarly journal published by the Hoover Institution that is
committed to looking at hard facts about school reform. Other sponsoring
institutions are the Harvard Program on Education Policy and Governance and the
Thomas B. Fordham Foundation.
"We
are not evaluating state tests, nor are we grading states on the performance of
their students," explain Peterson and Hess. "We are checking for
'truth in advertising,' investigating whether state-announced proficiency
levels mean what they say."
This
year, a total of 48 states were assessed, including 9 new ones. In the good
news category, a handful of states have kept their standards rigorous for a
second consecutive year, each assessing their own performance on a particularly
tough curve. Massachusetts, South Carolina, Wyoming, Maine, and Missouri once
again earned As.
Montana
topped all others as the nation's most improved state, and Texas, Arkansas, and
Wisconsin significantly boosted their proficiency standards over last year.
The
bad news is that some states that had been in good standing are letting their
standards slide. The biggest decline was in Arizona, with significant drops (in
order of magnitude) in Maryland, Ohio, North Dakota, and Idaho.
In
the "cream puff" category, states with already low standards have
done nothing to raise them. Oklahoma and Tennessee both earned Fs because their
self-reported performance is much higher than can be justified by the NAEP
results. States with nearly equally embarrassing D minuses included Alabama,
Mississippi, Georgia, West Virginia, and North Carolina.
To
learn your state's grade and how it was graded, go to http://www.educationnext.org/20063/28.html
High
school students in the United States are consistently outperformed by those
from Asian and some European countries on international assessments of
mathematics and science, according to The Condition of Education 2006 report
released today by the U.S. Department of Education's National Center for Education
Statistics (NCES). Fourth-graders, by comparison, score as well or better than
most of their international peers, although their counterparts in other
countries are gaining ground.
"While
our younger students are making progress on national assessments and are ahead
on some international measures, the same can not be said at the high school
level," said Mark Schneider, NCES Commissioner. "U.S. students do
relatively well in reading literacy when compared to their international peers,
but they are outperformed in mathematics and science and our 15-year-old
students trail many of our competitors in math and science literacy."
The
Condition of Education is a congressionally mandated report that provides an
annual statistical portrait of education in the United States. The 50
indicators included in the report cover all aspects of education, from student
achievement to school environment and from early childhood through
postsecondary education.
The
report shows that U. S. public schools have the most diverse student population
than at any other time in history. In addition, more individuals are enrolling
in postsecondary education, and more bachelor's degrees have been awarded than
in the past.
Among
the report's other findings:
Elementary/Secondary
Achievement
* U.S. fourth-grade
students had higher reading literacy scores than students in 23 of the 34
participating countries, according to one international assessment. In
mathematics, fourth graders' performance was better than their peers in 13
countries but lower than 11 others. In science, students in only three
countries scored higher. However, while other countries made gains from 1995 in
mathematics and science, U.S. scores were unchanged.
* U.S. eighth-graders
improved their standings relative to students of 21 other countries that
participated in international assessments in math and science from 1995 to
2003.
* U.S. 15-year-olds had
lower average scores in mathematics and science literacy compared with most of
their peers from Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development member
countries.
* Fourth-graders showed
improvements in math and science, with rising scores between 1996 and 2005 on
the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP).
* Twelfth-graders'
performance in NAEP science declined between 1996 and 2005.
Postsecondary
Education
* More students are
enrolling in colleges and getting degrees, and the enrollment increase is
projected to continue through 2015.
* The number of bachelor's
degrees awarded increased by 33 percent between 1989-90 and 2003-04, while the
number of associate's degrees increased by 46 percent.
* The sole decline among
the top five most popular degree fields between 1989-90 and 2003-04 was in
engineering and engineering technologies (five percent).
America's
Students Today
* Nineteen percent of
children ages 5-17 speak a language other than English at home.
* Minority students make up
43 percent of public school enrollment.
* Female college enrollment
passed male enrollment in 1978, and the gender gap has widened and is expected
to grow.
NCES
is the statistical center of the Institute of Education Sciences in the U.S.
Department of Education. The full text of The Condition of Education 2006 (in
HTML format), along with related data tables and indicators from previous
years, can be viewed at http://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe
I
don't think Newsweek's "America's Best High Schools" list
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12532678/site/newsweek
lives
up to it's name...
Several
schools in the "Top 100" reported half or fewer of their African
American students graduating. All of those schools are still on Newsweek's list
this year...
For
example, Atlantic Community High School, in Delray Beach, Florida, ranked #25
on Newsweek's list, reported a 50 percent graduation rate for its African
American students in 2004, according to its detailed NCLB report card from the
Florida Department of Education.
http://web.fldoe.org/nclb/default.cfm?action=report2&level=School&school=0862&district=50
About
45 percent of the school's 2,000+ students are African American, and about 35
percent qualify for free and reduced-price lunch. That's not an affluent,
lily-white suburban school, like many on Newsweek's list, but it's not
"high-poverty, high-minority," either. In fact, the percentage of
economically disadvantaged students at Atlantic Community is lower than the
statewide average in Florida, which is 46 percent. Now, I think it's a scandal
that nearly half of Florida's kids are economically disadvantaged, but does
that mean we shouldn't expect the state's high schools to get more than half
their black students to graduation?
Further,
there are schools on Jay's own list that prove him wrong. For example, this year's
school #87, YES College Preparatory School in Houston, Texas, has a student
enrollment that is 92 percent Hispanic, 5 percent black, and has 75 percent of
students eligible for free and reduced-price lunch--a higher percentage of
economically disadvantaged students than all but one other school in Newsweek's
list. But YES reports a 93.9 percent graduation rate, and 100 percent of its
graduates are accepted to four-year colleges.
Atlantic
may be doing great things for some of its students, but a method that ranks it
higher than YES seems to defy common sense.
To
see complete article please go to:
http://www.quickanded.com/2006/05/best-we-can-expect.html
Research
Center Grades the States on School Tech:
West
Virginia Leads Nation With an "A," Nevada Trails With a
"D-"
While
the No Child Left Behind Act has touched off a boom in school data collection,
much work needs to be done before the vast amounts of student information can
be harnessed to improve learning, according to Technology Counts 2006: The
Information Edge: Using Data to Accelerate Achievement, a new report from Education
Week and the
Editorial Projects in Education (EPE) Research Center. The report is based on a
systematic analysis by the EPE Research Center of the structure and quality of
states' computerized data systems, and how those systems are being used. It
comes at a time when states are under tremendous pressure to get technology
systems and access to data up and running as genuinely useful tools to
accelerate student learning on a broad scale. In a survey of state education
officials conducted for the report, the EPE Research Center finds that despite
the federal government's push to make data central to instructional decisions,
states are still far away from putting their electronic information into a form
that local educators can easily use. ..
Report
Cards: Grading the States
For
the first time ever, Technology Counts issues letter grades for all 50 states and
the District of Columbia, ranking their efforts to improve access to and use of
school technology and the ability of teachers to use it more effectively. While
the nation earned an overall grade of C-plus, West Virginia, and Virginia
earned the highest marks, with grades of A and A-minus, respectively. At the
opposite end of the spectrum, a small group of states is lagging behind.
Minnesota, Oregon, and Rhode Island all received an overall D grade, while
Nevada ranked last in the nation with a D-minus. Grades are based on where
states stand in three core areas of state policy and practice, including access
to instructional technology, use of technology, and capacity to effectively use
technology. They are contained both in the print version of the report and in
new online-only State Technology Reports created by the EPE Research Center.
For
the complete article, please go to:
http://www.edweek.org/media/ew/tc/2006/TC06_press.pdf
To access
individual state reports please go to:
http://www.edweek.org/ew/toc/2006/05/04/index.html?levelId=1000
Being
able to take high-quality, high-intensity classes during high school can play a
key role in the success of students whose parents have either lower incomes or
lower educational levels. Though these students are less likely to enroll in
college than students from more advantaged backgrounds, pursuit of rigorous
classes in high school can help change that.
The
relationship between high school math and college enrollment is particularly
striking: just 27 percent of high school graduates in the U.S. whose parents
did not go to college enroll in a four-year institution within two years.
However, this rate jumps to 64 percent for students who take at least one math
course beyond Algebra II.
The
reason? Taking higher-level math most likely reflects a lifetime of high
expectations, previous success with math, and a willingness to take challenging
courses -- attributes that are key to college enrollment and that students may
have acquired from parents, teachers, other role models, or on their own. In
fact, of all pre-college courses, the highest level of math taken in high
school has the strongest influence on degree completion.
For
tips on how to establish high expectations for students as early as middle
school and for assistance in planning for higher education academically and
financially, visit www.AIE.org
TG
provides this Web site as a public service to help all families and students
achieve their educational and career dreams.
SOURCES:
State of Student Aid and Higher Education in Texas 2006; National Center for
Education Statistics (NCES), Students Whose Parents Did Not Go to College: Postsecondary
Access, Persistence, and Attainment, by Susan Choy, 2001 (http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2001/2001126.pdf
About
TG
TG is a
public, nonprofit corporation that helps create access to higher education for
millions of families and students through its role as an administrator of the
Federal Family Education Loan Program (FFELP). As a public service, TG provides
Edufacts, a publication containing current information about education issues,
on a monthly basis. Edufacts is one of the many ways in which TG promotes
awareness of education issues, advising the public on national and state trends
in education and student aid, and serving as a premier source of information.
A
group of Indiana high school students traded in their textbooks for a
multiplayer videogame and achieved higher test scores than students learning
the exact same material the old-fashioned way.
Under
the watchful tutelage of David McDivitt, an enterprising Social Studies teacher
at Oak Hill High School in Converse, Ind., 64 sophomore students played
"Making History(r)", the historical simulation game from Muzzy Lane
Software. Another group of students used their standard history textbooks along
with the usual lectures and assignments that define a typical day in high
school.
Both
groups were attempting to learn the same material: The political and economic
causes of World War II.
Both
groups were tested on their knowledge of key events, such as the 1938 Munich
Conference and their general knowledge of European geography.
One
group – the students who played "Making History" –
learned more facts and wrote more sophisticated essays in tests conducted after
a week of game play. According to Mr. McDivitt, "Making History" also
addresses several key components of Indiana's state curriculum guidelines for
secondary education.
"For
every teacher using a videogame in the classroom there are probably a hundred
others watching and wondering about the real educational impact this
technology," says Mr. McDivitt.
"I
am not an expert in statistics unless it has to do with points allowed by my
defense on the Oak Hill Golden Eagle football team. But what I am seeing here
is the game players are doing better on assessment. The kids who played the
game scored as well or better on every single test question we
administered."
Mr.
McDivitt applied a common set of questions to both groups of students prior to
game week, and then tested the students with the same questions after each
group had completed their learning cycles.
What
he found was a noticeable and in some cases stunning difference in the degree
to which the game-play students improved compared with the textbook students.
Here
are some of the highlights (percentages indicate the relative increase in
performance from the pre-lesson test to the post-lesson test):
-
Identify the countries of Europe on a blank map outline:
Game
Players: 70%
Non-Game
Players: 45%
-
Explain the significance of the 1938 Munch Conference:
Game
Players: 90%
Non-Game
Players: 55%
-
Define the reasons for the start of World War II:
Game
Players: 67%
Non-Game
Players: 35%
"I am
not saying that games are the panacea for all of education's problems,"
says Mr. McDivitt. "But there is no doubt anymore that the right videogame
integrated properly with traditional curriculum has a clear and meaningful
impact on the quality of learning."
K-12
students across the U.S. say they'd find math more engaging if teachers infused
more technology into their lessons. They also say they want to explore the
sciences through technology simulations, field trips, and "CSI"-like
problem-solving exercises rather than textbooks.
These
are among the insights revealed in the third annual NetDay Speak Up survey
sponsored by Dell and BellSouth Foundation. NetDay, a nonprofit organization
focused on preparing today's students to be tomorrow's innovators, collected
viewpoints from more than 185,000 students and 15,000 teachers from all 50
states in the study, held in fall 2005.
"We
learn a lot by listening to students and teachers about how they use -- and how
they want to use -- technology for teaching and learning," said Karen
Bruett, vice president of Dell's K-12 business. "This kind of real-world
feedback is a great tool to help us deliver what technology users will
value."
The
student survey also revealed:
--
62 percent of students in grades 6-12 said a mobile computer is integral to a
21st-century classroom. More than 40 percent of this group said a modern
classroom should include cell phones, interactive whiteboards, televisions,
digital cameras, video cameras, scanners and CD/DVD burners.
--
60 percent of 6-12-grade respondents said they teach their parents how to use
new technology, and more than half teach their siblings (55 percent) and their
friends (60 percent).
Teacher
responses included:
--
Nearly half (48 percent) of teachers said they've seen technology enhance
student achievement; and 59 percent said technology is enhancing students'
engagement in school.
--
Nearly half (46 percent) of the respondents identified "not enough
computers" as their top barrier to integrating technology into curriculum.
Others feel restricted by "lack of time in the school day" (57
percent) and "not all students and families (having) computer access at
home (43 percent)."
--
Nearly 60 percent of respondents said they'd like more professional development
and training in integrating technology into the curriculum. For the most part,
respondents say they use technology as a productivity tool for recording grades
and attendance, word processing, teaching materials and preparing lessons.
"This
year's Speak Up data findings demonstrate that students of all ages are
'pushing the envelope' in their innovative use of technology for learning,
communications and networking," said Julie Evans, NetDay CEO. "The
Speak Up data provides education, business, community and policy leaders with a
unique opportunity to learn from today's students and use that information to
create 21st century learning environments."
For
additional results from this year's NetDay Speak Up survey, visit www.dell4k12.com/netday
Three-quarters
of American public elementary schools offer physical education more than one
day a week, and 8 out of 10 have daily recess, according to a report released
by the U.S. Department of Education's National Center for Education Statistics
(NCES) in the Institute of Education Sciences (IES).
But
the report, Calories In, Calories Out: Food and Exercise in Public Elementary
Schools, 2005, also found that 7 percent of these schools have no daily recess.
Fifteen percent sell candy at school, and 29 percent do not weigh students. The
study, prompted by concern over the rate of obesity among school-age children,
was designed to obtain current national information on the availability of food
and opportunities for physical activity in public elementary schools.
The
report includes findings on the types of food sold in schools and in their
cafeterias or lunchrooms; the types of food dispensed by vending machines and
school stores or snack bars, and the times when foods are available at those
locations; food service operations and contracts with companies to sell food at
schools; the amount of scheduled recess and physical education; and the extent
to which schools measure students' height and weight and calculate body mass
index.
Other
highlights of the report:
In 2005,
schools offered both healthy and less nutritious foods for sale outside of full
school meals, although a higher proportion of the schools offered nutritious
than less nutritious items. For example, schools were more likely to offer
100-percent juice (53 percent), bottled water (46 percent), and green salad or
fruit (40 percent) than less nutritious items such as french fried potatoes (17
percent).
Fifteen percent
of public elementary schools sold candy at one or more locations in the school,
and 5 percent sold candy in the cafeteria or lunchroom. In addition, 9 percent
of the schools sold soft drinks and about 5 percent sold snack foods at vending
machines.
Fifteen percent
of public elementary schools had school store or snack bar foods available to
students during mealtimes, and 11 percent had foods available at school stores or
snack bars at other times during the school day.
Almost all
public elementary schools (94 percent) offered foods for sale outside of full
school meals. Of these schools, 36 percent indicated that the foods were sold
to generate funds to support food service operations at the school or district.
Schools were
more likely to report the availability of foods in the school stores or snack
bars at mealtimes if foods were sold to generate funds than if the foods were
not sold for this purpose.
Almost a
quarter (23 percent) of public elementary schools indicated that one or more
companies had a contract to sell drinks or snack foods at the school.
Most public
elementary schools reported daily recess, with the proportion of schools
reporting this schedule ranging from 83 to 88 percent across elementary grades.
The average number of minutes per day of scheduled recess ranged from 27.8 for
first grade to 23.8 for sixth grade.
While almost
all public elementary schools (99 percent) reported that they scheduled
physical education for elementary grades, the proportion of schools that
provided daily physical education ranged from 17 to 22 percent across
elementary grades.
At least half
of all elementary schools scheduled physical education one or two days a week.
Fifty-one
percent of public elementary schools offered school-sponsored before- or
after-school activities that emphasize exercise, such as walking or running,
sports, dance, or group games.
The
full text of Calories In, Calories Out: Food and Exercise in Public Elementary
Schools, 2005 is available online at http://nces.ed.gov/Pubs2006/nutrition
.
A copy of the report can be ordered by calling toll free 1-877-4ED-Pubs
(1-877-433-7827) (TTY/TDD 1-877-576-7734); via e-mail at edpubs@inet.ed.gov
or via the Internet at http://www.ed.gov/pubs/edpubs.html
Executive
Summary
National
Board Certification is a voluntary process established by the National Board
for Professional Teaching Standards (NBPTS) to measure what accomplished
teachers should know and be able to do. Certification is achieved through a
rigorous performance-based assessment that takes between one and three years to
complete. As of November 2004, approximately 40,200 teachers had earned National
Board Certification. This study was undertaken as part of the National Board's
continuing effort to measure the impact of National Board Certification and the
effects of National Board Certified Teachers (NBCTs) on the quality of teaching
and student achievement in America's schools. End-of-grade mathematics and
reading test scores from two large North Carolina school districts
(Charlotte-Mecklenberg and Wake County) from the 1999-2000 through 2002-2003
school years, grades 4 through 8 were analyzed to compare NBCTs with other
teachers. Over 260,000 student records (about half in mathematics and half in
reading), representing over 4600 teacher-subject-grade-year combinations, were
included in the analyses. Of that 4600+, 281 represented National Board
Certified mathematics teacher-years, 306 represented National Board Certified
reading teacher-years.
Models
were fitted to each of the ten subject-grade combinations (1) using end-ofgrade
scores as the response variable with end-of-grade scores from the previous year
as covariates, and (2) using gain scores (end-of-grade score minus previous
year end-of-grade score) as the response variable. Additional explanatory
variables included: teacher certification status (the factor of interest),
teacher years-of-experience, and the gender and race of the student. A
hierarchical model was used to account for the fact that students were nested
within teachers. For comparison with other recent studies, non-hierarchical
models were fitted as well.
Three
planned comparisons assessed the differences between NBCTs and other teachers:
(1) NBCTs versus teachers who have never been involved in the certification
process, (2) NBCTs versus teachers who planned to attain certification in the
future, (3) NBCTs versus teachers who failed in their attempt at certification.
Findings.
Overall,
based on the hierarchical models, students of NBCTs did not have significantly
better rates of academic progress than students of other teachers and estimated
effect sizes were relatively small. The more relevant and important finding was
that the variation among teachers within the same certification status was
sufficiently large that whatever small average differences there were between
teachers in different certification status categories were rather meaningless
in comparison. As a result, a student randomly assigned to a NBCT is no more
likely to get an "effective" (or an "ineffective") teacher
than a student assigned to a non-NBCT.
For
full report please go to:
http://www.nbpts.org/pdf/sas_final_report.pdf
The
following is a brief summary of performance results of American Indian/Alaska
Native students at grades 4 and 8 on the 2005 National Assessment of
Educational Progress (NAEP) reading assessment.
Nationally
representative samples of about 166,000 grade 4 and 159,000 grade 8 students
participated in the assessment. Of these, approximately 3,800 American
Indian/Alaska Native students participated at grade 4, and approximately 3,400
American Indian/Alaska Native students participated at grade 8. The national
sample includes students from both public and nonpublic schools (i.e., Bureau
of Indian Affairs [BIA], Department of Defense Education Activity [DoDEA], and
private schools).
Results
are presented for the nation, for regions, for selected states, and for student
groups. The regions included in the study are Atlantic, North Central, South
Central, Mountain, and Pacific. In addition to the national sample, states with
relatively large populations of American Indian/Alaska Native students were
selected for this study. Those states whose results are included in this
report—Alaska, Arizona, Montana, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, and
South Dakota—are the seven states with the largest proportions of
American Indians and Alaska Natives as a percentage of the state's total
population. The state samples included only public and BIA schools.
National
At both grades
4 and 8, American Indian/Alaska Native students had lower average scale scores
in reading than all other students in the nation (students who are neither
American Indian nor Alaska Native).
The percentages
of students performing at or above Basic and at or above Proficient were also
lower for American Indian/Alaska Native students than those for all other
students at both grades.
Regional
At grade 4,
American Indian/Alaska Native students had lower average scores than those of
all other students in all the regions.
At grade 8,
American Indian/Alaska Native students in the North Central, Mountain, and
Pacific regions had lower average scores than all other students in the same
regions.
Selected
States
At grade 4,
American Indian/Alaska Native students in Oklahoma had a higher average score
and a higher percentage of students performing at or above Basic than their
peers in the nation and in the other selected states.
Compared to
their peers in the nation, American Indian/Alaska Native students at grade 4 in
Alaska, Arizona, New Mexico, and South Dakota had lower average scores.
At grade 8,
compared to American Indian/Alaska Native students in the nation, American Indian/Alaska
Native students in Oklahoma had higher average scores, and those in Alaska,
Arizona, New Mexico, and South Dakota had lower average scores.
American
Indian/Alaska Native students at grade 8 in Oklahoma had higher average scores
than their peers in Alaska, Arizona, New Mexico, and South Dakota.
Student
Groups
At both grades
4 and 8, compared to Black students in the nation, American Indian/Alaska
Native students had higher average scores and higher percentages performing at
or above Basic. American Indian/Alaska Native students had lower average scores
and lower percentages performing at or above Basic than White and Asian/Pacific
Islander students. No significant difference was found between the performance
of Hispanic students and American Indian/Alaska Native students on either
measure.
At grade 4, the
average scores and the percentages of American Indian/Alaska Native students
performing at or above the Basic and Proficient levels were higher in urban
fringe/large town and central city locations than in rural/small town
locations. For other students at both grades 4 and 8, reading performance was
higher in urban fringe and rural locations than in central city locations.
To
see Math Summary and/or complete report please go to:
http://165.224.221.98/nationsreportcard/nies/
New
Report on Adult Literacy Levels Shows Need for High School Reform
American
adults can read a newspaper or magazine about as well as they could a decade
ago, but have made significant strides in performing literacy tasks that
involve computation, according to the first national study of adult literacy
since 1992.
The
National Assessment of Adult Literacy (NAAL), released December 15th by the National Center for Education
Statistics (NCES), found little change between 1992 and 2003 in adults' ability
to read and understand sentences and paragraphs or to understand documents such
as job applications.
"One
adult unable to read is one too many in America," said U.S. Secretary of
Education Margaret Spellings, who today announced plans to coordinate adult
education efforts in 2006 across multiple federal agencies. "We must take
a comprehensive and preventive approach, beginning with elementary schools and
with special emphasis in our high schools. We must focus resources toward
proven, research-based methods to ensure that all adults have the necessary
literacy skills to be successful."
African
Americans scored higher in 2003 than in 1992 in all three categories,
increasing 16 points in quantitative, eight points in document and six points
in prose literacy. Overall, adults have improved in document and quantitative
literacy with a smaller percentage of adults in 2003 in the Below Basic
category compared to 1992. Whites, African Americans and Asian/Pacific
Islanders have improved in all three measures of literacy with a smaller
percentage in 2003 in the Below Basic category compared to 1992.
Hispanic
adults showed a decrease in scores for both prose and document literacy and a
higher percentage in the Below Basic category. The report also showed that five
percent of U.S. adults, about 11 million people, were termed
"nonliterate" in English, meaning interviewers could not communicate
with them or that they were unable to answer a minimum number of questions.
NAAL in
2003 assessed a nationally representative sample of more than 19,000 Americans
age 16 and older, most in their homes and some in prisons. NCES, which is part
of the U.S. Department of Education's Institute of Education Sciences,
conducted the assessment in both 1992 and 2003.
NAAL
uses three categories to define English-language literacy: prose, document and quantitative.
Prose literacy includes the skills needed to understand continuous text, such
as newspaper articles. Document literacy is the ability to understand the
content and structure of documents such as prescription drug labels.
Quantitative literacy involves using numbers in text, such as computing and
comparing the cost per ounce of food items.
NAAL
reports literacy in each category using a 0-500 scale score. Scores are then
grouped in four literacy levels: Below Basic, Basic, Intermediate and Proficient.
Below Basic is the lowest level and indicates having "no more than the
most simple and concrete literacy skills." Those who can perform
"complex and challenging" tasks are considered at the Proficient
level.
The
report, A First Look at the Literacy of America's Adults in the 21st Century, analyzed literacy
results based on a variety of factors, including race/ethnicity, gender, age,
and level of educational attainment. A companion report, Key Concepts and
Features of the 2003 National Assessment of Adult Literacy, describes the
assessment's key features and major data types. It was also released today.
Other
report highlights:
* White
adults' scores were up nine points in quantitative, but were unchanged in prose
and document literacy.
* Hispanic
adults' scores declined in prose and document literacy 18 points and 14 points,
respectively, but were unchanged in quantitative literacy.
* Asian/Pacific
Islanders' scores increased 16 points in prose literacy, but were unchanged in
document and quantitative literacy.
* Among
those who spoke only Spanish before starting school, scores were down 17 points
in prose and document literacy between 1992 and 2003.
To
put its findings in perspective, NAAL also reported on U.S. population changes
between 1992 and 2003. During the decade, the percentage of white adults
decreased from 77 to 70 percent, while the percentage of Hispanic adults
increased from eight to 12 percent. The percentage of Asian/Pacific Islander
adults doubled (to 4 percent). The percentage of adults who spoke only English
before starting school decreased from 86 to 81 percent.
To
view the reports and for more information, visit http://nces.ed.gov/naal
A
new report released by Springboard Schools turns conventional wisdom on its
head by revealing that school districts, previously thought to be roadblocks to
reform, can play a key role in boosting student achievement. The report
identifies "promising practices," including reporting publicly on
progress and creating a balance between centralization and decentralization,
that have enabled some high-poverty districts to succeed.
These
best practices were identified through a statewide survey and studied in depth
in three high-performing, high-poverty districts profiled in the report: Elk
Grove Unified (Sacramento), Rowland Unified (Los Angeles), and Oak Grove (San
Jose). Each of these districts defies the odds by successfully serving high
populations of English-language learners and low-income students. Research
included a combination of a survey of principals, site visits, and interviews
with district leaders.
The
report, titled "Minding the Gap: New Roles for School Districts in the Era
of Accountability," identifies five key ways that high-performing,
high-poverty districts play an active role in student achievement. These
districts:
--
Seek Transparency. Set explicit goals, identify key strategies to achieve those
goals, and report publicly on progress.
--
Balance Centralization and Decentralization. Find a clear and workable balance
between what will be centralized and where to maintain autonomy and
flexibility.
--
Use Testing to Drive Improvement. Testing is not an end, but a way to identify and
respond as part of a larger improvement process.
--
Invest in Professional Development. Invest in professional development so that
administrators' and teachers' knowledge is continually updated.
--
Build Infrastructure. Build structures and processes by which teachers can be
part of a learning organization.
While
these practices may seem like common sense, many school districts in California
have not embraced them. Too many California school districts stick to their old
roles -- managing plant and human resources and setting goals without linking
those goals to appropriate actions.
Springboard
Schools is a nonprofit and non-partisan network of educators committed to
raising student achievement and narrowing the achievement gap. To accomplish
this, Springboard Schools functions both as a research organization and a
provider of support for schools
Read
the full report, "Minding the Gap: New Roles for School Districts in the
Era of Accountability," at: www.springboardschools.org
In
keeping with the goal of ensuring that all students achieve to high standards,
the U.S. Department of Education announced the availability of a new tool kit
to help states fully implement the accountability provisions of No Child Left
Behind for students with disabilities.
The
"Tool Kit on Teaching and Assessing Students with Disabilities" was
released by John H. Hager, assistant secretary of the Office of Special
Education and Rehabilitative Services, and Henry Johnson, assistant secretary
of the Office of Elementary and Secondary Education.
A
collaborative effort of OSERS and OESE, the Tool Kit is a publication that
provides up-to-date guidance on assessing the achievement and progress of
students with disabilities.
It
also includes a set of technical assistance products that offer practical,
research-based approaches to the challenges schools are facing in the areas of
assessment, instruction, behavioral interventions, and use of accommodations
for students with disabilities.
In
addition, the Tool Kit offers information about research now under way to
further expand educators' knowledge in this area.
The
Tool Kit is being disseminated to the state leadership so that they can share
these materials with those in their states who have responsibility for
improving teaching and assessment of all students. The Tool Kit is also
accessible through ed.gov at http://www.ed.gov/about/offices/list/osers/reports.html
According
to the U.S. Census Bureau, a college degree adds about a million dollars to your
lifetime earnings -- compared to the earnings of those with only a high school
degree.
But
does it matter which college you attend? If you spend $200,000 to go to Harvard
or Yale, does that mean you'll make more money when you get out?
Robert
Binion is finding out, first hand.
His
SAT score was 1580, his GPA 4.27. He had no problem getting into college.
"I
got into Harvard, Princeton, Duke, Virginia, and then in-state school," he
lists off.
So
he had to decide: at a cost of over $40,000 per year, is an elite college a
good investment?
"According
to some of the studies and the articles I've read," says Lorraine Hastings
of The College Board, "I think the research is showing that there's really
not a big difference in money."
In
fact, a Princeton economist looked at the wages of adults who, 20 years
earlier, were in college - and found that annual income didn't depend on where
you went to school, but how hard you work. "It really depends on how you
perform when you get there," explains Hastings.
She
says what really matters is who you are - your talent, effort and attitude. ..
On
the other hand, she says, because of their huge endowments, elite schools are a
good choice for qualified kids who are poor.
"If
you're a low-income student, you may have a better chance getting an education
paid for at Harvard than at a state school, where you have more students that
look like you, that are in the same financial category," Hastings says...
To
see the complete report, please go to:
http://wcco.com/local/local_story_155160047.html
President
in State of the Union Calls for More AP(r) Teachers
New
York, Maryland, Utah, California, Virginia, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Florida
Lead the Way; Record-Breaking Gains in Arkansas
The
College Board, the not-for-profit membership association that administers the
AP Program, has released the second annual Advanced Placement Report to the
Nation,
showing that all 50 states and the District of Columbia have achieved an
increase in the percentage of high school students earning a grade of 3 or
higher in college-level AP courses since 2000.
In
the nation's public schools, 14.1 percent of students in the class of 2005
demonstrated mastery of an AP Exam by earning an exam grade of 3 or
higher—the grade predictive of college success1—on one or more AP
Exams while in high school. This is up from 13.2 percent for the class of 2004
and 10.2 percent for the class of 2000.
Although
35 states and the District of Columbia have lower results than the nationwide
average of 14.1 percent, every single state and the District of Columbia saw a
greater proportion of its class of 2005 score a 3 or higher than occurred
within its class of 2000. AP achievements for each state's class of 2000 and
class of 2005 are detailed in the report.
These
achievements are noteworthy because, over the last five years, the U.S. public
high school population has increased by more than 100,000 students. U.S.
schools have done more than maintain the proportion of students who succeed on
an AP Exam before graduating from high school—they have increased that
proportion from 10 percent to 14 percent.
The
achievement in spreading AP courses is elevating the quality of our nation's
secondary school classrooms. The Trends in International Mathematics and
Science Study (formally known as the Third International Mathematics and
Science Study) found that while the rest of U.S. students ranked at the bottom
of advanced math and physics achievement among developed nations, the U.S. AP
Calculus and AP Physics students, even those who failed to earn a successful AP
Exam grade, were competitive in math and science achievement with students from
the top-performing nations.
Students
who take AP math and science courses in high school are much more likely than
other students to continue a course of study in science, technology,
engineering, or mathematics (STEM) majors than students who do not take such
courses in high school. In his State of the Union address on January 31,
President George W. Bush called for the training of 70,000 high school teachers
"over five years" for Advanced Placement science and math courses.
"Educators
and leaders at the federal, state, district, and school levels deserve
tremendous credit for enabling a wider segment of our nation's youth than ever
before to achieve success on an AP Exam," said College Board President
Gaston Caperton.
"Participation
in AP has remarkable benefits for students; most notably, AP math and science
courses are enabling American students to develop a level of math and science
expertise that exceeds that of students from all other nations; the AP world
language courses are developing our students' capacity to engage with Asian and
European cultures, while AP English and social science courses develop the
skills necessary for students to write effectively, think critically, and
engage with great minds from the world's cultures."
Maintaining
Quality in the AP Classroom
The
Report
shows that the quality of learning in AP classrooms has remained steady as
schools have invited more students to take on the challenge of an AP course. AP
Examinations use standards that are set by college and university professors
who administer AP Exam questions to their own students and identify the
knowledge and skills that must be demonstrated on each question. To ensure that
each AP Exam, from year to year, is of equivalent difficulty and rigor,
selected multiple-choice questions, which are not disclosed, are woven back
into subsequent AP Exams, enabling psychometricians and statisticians to ensure
that an AP Exam grade one year represents the same level of content mastery as
in previous years.
The
Report
includes graphs for four high-volume AP Examinations and shows that the
students who took AP Exams in 2005 are achieving learning outcomes equivalent
to those experienced by the smaller, less diverse AP student population who
took AP Exams in earlier years.
"Across
AP Exams, there are no statistically significant increases or decreases in
content mastery from 2001 to 2005, indicating that educators have done a
tremendous job of preserving quality and learning outcomes even while
increasing the number of students who have access to AP," said Caperton.
To assist
schools in maintaining the quality of courses labeled "AP" as these
opportunities continue to expand, beginning in fall 2006, [in the
soon-to-be-published AP Policy Guides] the College Board is implementing an AP
Course Audit designed to ensure that each course labeled "AP"
provides students with the content knowledge and resources needed for them to
have a successful, college-level experience while still in high school.
Equity
Gaps in Advanced Placement
Despite
increased diversity in the AP classroom, African American and Native American
students remain significantly underrepresented in AP classrooms. Nationwide,
African American students make up 13.4 percent of the student population, but
only 6.4 percent of AP Exam takers, and Native Americans make up 1.1 percent of
the student population, but only 0.5 percent of the AP examinee population.
Latino
students are well represented in AP classrooms nationally—they represent
13.4 percent of the student population and 13.6 percent of AP Examinees.
However, Latino students remain underrepresented in AP programs in many states.
The
Report
warns that despite the strides that have been made by educators to provide
traditionally underrepresented students with AP courses, lower performances on
AP Exams indicate that many high-potential teachers and students are not
receiving adequate preparation for the rigors of an AP course. As a result,
traditionally underrepresented students currently demonstrate significantly
lower performances on AP Exams.
"Major
initiatives are needed to ensure that all students are adequately prepared starting in
middle school so that students will have a fair shot at AP success when they
reach high school," said Caperton. "And just as important, as
America's classrooms continue to diversify, new programs must be initiated to
build schools' capacities to offer AP courses to all student populations,
especially underserved minority students and young people from rural
America."
Such
initiatives, based in legislation designed to expand access to AP courses, have
been successful in many states. In Arkansas last year, policy legislation
resulted in record-breaking improvements in AP participation, particularly
among traditionally underrepresented African American, Hispanic, and low-income
students. Beginning with the 2008-09 school year, Arkansas legislation mandates
that all school districts provide AP courses in each of the four core areas of
mathematics, English, science, and social studies. Thereafter, the districts
must add at least one core course each year. Arkansas is covering the cost of
the AP Exams for all students and is providing schools with professional
development funds.
The
results of Arkansas's initiatives are unparalleled; in just one year's time,
Arkansas doubled the number of students participating in AP, more than doubled
the number of Hispanic students and low-income students participating in AP,
and more than tripled the number of African American students participating in
AP. Across the entire fifty-year history of the AP Program, there have never
been such large increases in participation, particularly among traditionally
underserved students, achieved in a single year.
Celebrating
Exemplary AP High Schools
Part
II of the Advanced Placement Report to the Nation uses data from all
schools participating in AP worldwide to identify schools currently leading in
AP participation and performance. This year California, Florida, and Texas have
the most schools (public and independent) cited in the Report.
Part
II also includes performance information for each of the AP subject areas and
feedback on student learning from past AP Exams so AP teachers and
administrators can revise and refocus their syllabi to address weaknesses or
deficiencies in their curricula.
The
College Board's Advanced Placement Program enables students to pursue
college-level studies while still in high school. Thirty-five courses in 20
subject areas are offered. Based on their performance on rigorous AP Exams, all
of which require students to craft written responses to open-ended questions
that are scored by current college faculty and AP consultants, students can
earn credit, advanced placement, or both for college.
"AP
benefits students, educators, and schools," said Caperton. "The
number of students participating in AP has more than doubled in 10 years, and
today almost 15,000 U.S. schools offer AP courses. Students who succeed on an
AP Exam are more likely to complete college. More often than not they have achieved
a mastery of writing, sophisticated study habits, and a penchant for critical
reasoning. Teachers who participate in AP professional development improve as
teachers in general, not just as teachers of AP classes. And it is often the
case that schools that participate in AP experience a diffusion of higher
academic standards throughout their entire curriculum."
Leading
the Nation
* New
York
leads the nation: Nearly 23 percent of students in New York's class of 2005 earned
an AP Exam grade of 3 or higher while in high school.
* This
year Maryland and Utah joined New York in seeing more than 20 percent of their students
achieve such AP results.
* California,
Virginia, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Florida are all poised to achieve that milestone soon, perhaps with this
year's graduating class.
The
Most Improvement
* Maryland,
North Carolina, Washington, Connecticut, Delaware, and Florida have seen the greatest
amount of positive change since 2000 in the proportion of students who succeed
on an AP Exam in high school.
* The
states that achieved the largest expansion of successful AP Exam performance
from 2004 to 2005: Oregon, Delaware, Alaska, Arkansas, Maine, Maryland, New
York, Virginia, and Washington.
Eliminating
Equity Gaps
* Florida,
Maryland,
and the District of Columbia have each achieved the significant milestone of seeing Latino
student representation in AP courses outpace Latino student representation in
non-AP courses.
* California and Texas, states with large Latino
populations, are within reach of this goal.
1
Each AP Exam is scored using a five-point scale: 5—Extremely well
qualified; 4—Well qualified; 3—Qualified; 2—Possibly
qualified; 1—No recommendation.
The
full report is available at:
http://www.collegeboard.com/prod_downloads/about/news_info/ap/2006/2006_ap-report-nation.pdf
The
State Educational Technology Directors Association has released its third
annual Trends Report on educational technology. In addition to reporting trends
on the NCLB Enhancing Education Through Technology (EETT) program, the 2006
report also includes general state policy trends in educational technology. The
findings in the 2006 report are based on surveys from 50 states and the
District of Columbia. Seven trends were reported across the first three years
of the program.
States
have been targeting NCLB EETT funds on the three program goals: increasing
student achievement, closing the digital divide, and integrating research-based
technology practices into learning.
With
the states exceeding the required 25% of NCLB II D funding
mandated
for professional development, over $159 million was dedicated to building the capacity
of teachers to use technology effectively. Many states established criteria for
professional development that have been met by LEA grantees.
The
states are leveraging resources across federal, state, local private and public
funding to advance NCLB goals.
As
noted in the first and second Trends report, approximately 48% of the formula
grants are under $5,000. That means that less than 4% of the funds require
almost 50% of the administrative support for formula grants. Grants that small
have very little impact on the advancement of the NCLB goals.
With
few funds available at the state level for evaluation and research, states are
grappling with the challenge of conducting high-quality evaluations of their
NCLB programs. Most are requiring that LEA grantees conduct local evaluations
and many are building the capacity of LEAs to do so. In addition, nearly 25% of
the states are funding or commissioning research studies on the impact of
educational technology on learning in schools.
State
directors are beginning to develop wide-scale efforts to establish a common
knowledge base of sound research practices or to conduct research studies that
will establish that common knowledge base for technology-enriched programs.
The
following states report that NCLB II D is the only source of funding in their
state for educational technology: Arizona, California, Delaware, Illinois,
Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, New Hampshire, Oklahoma,
Vermont, Washington, and Wisconsin.
To
see the full report, please go to:
http://www.setda.org/resources/SETDA%20Nat%27l%20Trends%20Final%202006%2Epdf
If
you would like a hard copy please email info@setda.org
Keith
Curry Lance of the Library Research Service in Denver, Colorado is the author
of the study "Powerful Libraries Make Powerful Learners: The Study of
Illinois School Libraries".
The report,
which sampled 661 Illinois public elementary and secondary schools, compared
Illinois Standards Achievement Test (ISAT) and Prairie State Achievement
Examination (PSAE) scores with the presence of school libraries and librarians.
"The
study confirms that the strongest library predictor of high student achievement
scores is a staff that includes at least one trained librarian, as well as
support staff," says Lance. "Reading, writing, and ACT scores rise
when students have larger, more current book collections and computers
connected to library databases and catalogs."
Key
research findings of the study include:
1. Schools with better-staffed libraries have more students who
succeed on tests.
2. High schools with computers that connect to library catalogs
and databases average 6.2% improvement on ACT scores.
3. Students that visit the library more frequently receive
improved reading and writing scores.
4. Students with access to larger, more current book collections
achieve higher reading, writing, and ACT scores.
The
study was commissioned by the Illinois School Library Media Association with a
Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) grant awarded by the Illinois State
Library, a division of the office of Jesse White, Secretary of State and State
Librarian. Funding for the study was also provided by the 21st Century
Information Fluency Program, a grant funded project that trains teachers,
librarians and students in enhancing their ability to locate, evaluate and use
digital information resources. The study is endorsed by the Illinois State
Board of Education, who provided data for the research.
The
Illinois School Library Media Association, based in Canton, was created in 1988
to provide leadership and support for the development, promotion, and
improvement of the school library media profession and programs in Illinois.
For
more information, including the executive summary, video, and fact sheets go
to: http://www.islma.org/news.htm
A
preliminary report is available at:
http://www.crpe.org/hot/PDF/BookerGrossGoldhaberAEFA06.pdf
National
Board Teachers No Better at Raising Scores Than Other Educators, Long-Awaited
Study Finds
A
long-awaited study using North Carolina data concludes that Students of
teachers who hold certification from the National Board for Professional Teaching
Standards achieve, on average, no greater academic progress than students of
teachers without the special status,.
The
study was conducted by William L.Sanders. He is the statistician who pioneered
the concept of "value-added" analysis of teaching effectiveness. The
study found that there was basically no difference in the achievement levels of
students whose teachers earned the prestigious NBPTS credential, and those who
didn't. The study examined more than 35,000 student records and more than 800 teachers
in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg and Wake County districts in North Carolina.
"The
amount of variability among teachers with the same NBPTS certification status
is considerably greater than the differences between teachers of different
status," says the report.
Mr.
Sanders, who manages the value-added assessment and research center at the
private SAS Institute in Cary, N.C., said one way to think about the
implications of the study would be to envision two teachers with identical
experience and education applying for the same job—one holding national
board certification and one not. To choose the board-certified teacher over the
teacher without the credential would be "only trivially better than a coin
flip," the researcher said.
Andrew
Rotherham—co-founder and director of Washington-based Education Sector, a
nonprofit think tank—posted on his Eduwonk blog a note that the privately
organized national board had apparently been "sitting on" the results
because they were not favorable.
Blog:
http://www.eduwonk.com/archives/2006_04_30_archive.html#114625479676112910
The
board, which had commissioned the study, then posted an "overview" of
the research on its Web site last week, though officials there denied the
posting was prompted by Mr. Rotherham's blog entry. They said they did not
intend to provide a link to the full study.
Overview:
http://www.nbpts.org/research/archive_3.cfm?id=162
The
overview is largely critical of the study, citing methodological problems. For
instance, the overview said the study lacked a sufficient number of teachers.
Carol
McDonald Connor, professor at Florida State University and research faculty
member for the Florida Center for Reading Research, Frederick J. Morrison,
developmental psychologist at the University of Michigan, and Leslie E. Katch,
graduate research assistant for Loyola University, Chicago School of Social
Work, share the International Reading Association's 2006 Dina Feitelson
Research Award for their article, "Beyond the reading wars: Exploring the
effect of child-instruction interactions on growth in early reading,"
published in Scientific Studies of Reading.
Twenty
years of accumulating research suggests most children become better readers
when they receive explicit phonics instruction in combination with meaningful
language activities, an approach commonly referred to as balanced instruction.
What Connor, Morrison, and Katch explore is the next step. Given the range of
students' abilities coming into the classroom, are there specific instructional
approaches that seem to work best?
Differences
in children's early literacy development, such as phonological awareness,
vocabulary, and word decoding, emerge early and set children up for very
different experiences, even though they are in the same classroom. For example,
a first grade student who has poor phonics skills and a limited vocabulary is
likely to make more progress over the course of the year when the teacher
explicitly teaches decoding and, only gradually, increases the amount of time
the child spends in self-managed learning, as would happen when reading
silently or completing a worksheet. By contrast, explicit decoding instruction
has virtually no effect on a child with strong decoding skills and a high
vocabulary. That child will experience the greatest growth when the classroom
provides a consistent amount of time for child-managed learning.
"Beyond
the reading wars: Exploring the effect of child-instruction interactions on
growth in early reading" demonstrates the effectiveness of individualized
instruction, while conceding that classroom management becomes more complex
when students demonstrate a range of skills. The researchers suggest studying
classroom instruction at multiple levels, given the interaction between
classroom practices and the characteristics of the children in the classroom.
Patricia
G. Mathes of Southern Methodist University, Carolyn A. Denton of the University
of Texas, Jack M. Fletcher and David J. Francis at the University of Houston,
Jason L. Anthony of the University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, and
Christopher W. Schatschneider of Florida State University, are recipients of
IRA's 2006 Albert J. Harris Award for their co-authored article, "The
effects of theoretically different instruction and student characteristics on
the skills of struggling readers," published in Reading Research
Quarterly. They will receive their award, including the US$1000 prize, on May 1
during the International Reading Association's 51st annual convention in
Chicago, Illinois.
This
study focuses on the 5–7 percent of students who struggle with reading
even though they are receiving high quality instruction in either their regular
classroom or in supplementary one-on-one or small group situations. The
researchers examined the impact on reading when these approaches are combined,
and further examined two supplementary programs—Proactive Reading,
derived from a Direct Instruction model, and Responsive Reading, which follows
a cognitive instruction model. Another design element of the study examined the
interaction between student characteristics and specific interventions.
Through
"The effects of theoretically different instruction and student
characteristics on the skills of struggling readers," Mathes, Denton,
Fletcher, Schatschneider, Francis and Anthony demonstrate the importance of
providing struggling first grade readers with both supplementary intervention
and enhanced classroom reading instruction. While the combined services did not
eliminate struggling readers, more students achieved better results than they
would have if offered only one option.
The
findings do not support the notion that there is "one best approach"
or a theory that is right. Instead, the gains by children were generally
comparable. Instead, the award-winning researchers noted, "Time is better
devoted to determining how to overcome the great challenges that exist in
getting effective interventions placed into schools. Likewise, our findings
support the idea that schools can be allowed to choose from among good choices
those interventions that best fit personal philosophies and personnel
talents."
Improving
middle school reading performance for all students may require building
instructional capacity, note Judith A. Langer and Arthur N. Applebee,
University of Albany, State University of New York. Building on the work of the
National Research Center on English Learning & Achievement, Langer and
Applebee have been involved in a two-year study assessing the impact of
professional development on curriculum, instruction, and student achievement.
Known as the Partnership for Literacy, the intervention provides teachers with
a framework for thinking about how to increase students' literacy skills, plus
specific curriculum and instruction approaches associated with higher achievement.
The
Partnership study involved 21 urban schools in high poverty neighborhoods, 69
classroom teachers, eight support teachers, and 119 classes in two states, New
York and Wisconsin. Through it, teachers were encouraged to change how they
taught so that students would be more likely to become cognitively engaged in
challenging subject matter. The professional development focuses on five
components that make a difference in student learning and achievement:
strategic curriculum; knowledge from discourse and thought-in-action; thinking
and learning in a social context; coherence, connections, and continuity; and
generative learning.
Initial
analysis indicates that this approach to professional development does result
in classrooms where students, including low achievers who typically zone out,
are more cognitively engaged. Soon after involvement in the Partnership,
teachers changed how they taught, increasing both the time spent in instruction
and the extent to which they built on student responses during instruction.
Other teaching practices changed more slowly as practice evolved over the
course of the two-year study. Some aspects of teachers' beliefs and attitudes
changed as well, although there was little movement on the key issue of whether
all students are capable of learning. But learn they did. Although the study
design meant that most students would have only one year of instruction in a
cognitively engaged environment, a comparison of fall and spring measures of
reading comprehension showed significant gains.
Foor
more information, please see:
http://cela.albany.edu/publication/IRAResearch.pdf
and
http://cela.albany.edu/research/partnerB6.htm
High
school students who plan to enter workforce training programs after they
graduate need academic skills similar to those needed by students planning to
enter college, according to a new study conducted by ACT. The findings suggest
that the math and reading skills needed to be ready for success in workforce
training programs are comparable to those needed for success in the first year
of college.
Based
on these results, ACT recommends that all high school students should
experience a common academic program, one that prepares them for both college
and workforce training, regardless of their post-graduation plans.
"We
can't afford to have one expectation for students who plan to attend college
and another for those who plan to enter the workforce or workforce training
programs after high school," said ACT CEO Richard L. Ferguson. "If we
educate some students to a lesser standard than others, we narrow their options
to jobs that, in today's economy, no longer pay well enough to support a
family."
"This
landmark report makes it clear that we must ensure high school is relevant and
rigorous for all students," said Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, chair of the
National Governors Association Education, Early Childhood, and Workforce
Committee. "We need to bring accountability and focus to our classrooms in
order to prepare graduates for the fiercely competitive global economy, whether
their next step is college or a career."
In
the study, ACT looked at the types of occupations that offer a wage sufficient
to support a family of four, as well as potential for career advancement, but
that do not require a four-year college degree. These occupations—which
include electricians, construction workers, upholsterers, plumbers,
etc.—typically require some combination of vocational training and
on-the-job experience or an associate's degree.
The
academic skill levels compared in the study were based on job profiles from
ACT's WorkKeys program and the company's College Readiness Benchmarks on its
ACT college admission and placement exam. The results show that the levels of
math and reading skills needed for success in the first year of college are
comparable to those needed by high school graduates to enter the vast majority
(90 percent) of these profiled jobs.
"In
today's increasingly technological society, more and more jobs that offer the
potential for good wages and future growth are requiring at least some type of
training or education beyond high school," said Ferguson. "Students
who graduate from high school without the skills they need for college are also
likely to lack the skills they need to successfully complete job training
programs."
The
ACT report emphasizes that the context within which these important skills are
taught and tested in schools may differ for students with different goals.
However, the level of expectation for all students should be the same.
"Our
education system should give every student the knowledge and skills they need
to have meaningful options when they finish high school," said Ferguson.
"These skills can be taught within rigorous high school classes, whether
they be academic- or career-focused."
The
report offers a number of recommendations to policymakers, including the
following:
* Establish a statewide
commitment that all students will be prepared for college and workforce
training programs when they graduate from high school.
* Require that all students
take a rigorous core preparatory course program in high school.
* Hold schools and states
accountable for preparing all students for college and workforce training
through rigorous core courses.
* Ensure that state
standards reflect the skills needed for college and workforce training
readiness for all students.
* Begin measuring student
progress with aligned assessments as early as the eighth grade to monitor progress,
make appropriate interventions, and maximize the number of high school
graduates who are ready for college and workforce training programs.
* Use college and workforce
training readiness as a prerequisite for entry into funded training or development
programs and offer remediation for those who do not meet established
expectations.
View
the ACT report:
Ready
for College and Ready for Work: Same or Different?
http://www.act.org/path/policy/reports/workready.html
When
mentors are trained to do coaching, the impact of the coaching on the mentors
is as profound as it is on the new teachers. Mentors usually choose to mentor for
altruistic reasons: they want to help a rookie have a less stressful beginning,
they want to give back to the profession, or they simply want to be a good
neighbor. Mentors are frequently surprised at how much they themselves gain,
reporting that the experience of promoting another's reflection enhances
reflection on their own practice. Some mentors continue to do peer coaching
with other mentors and colleagues after they are no longer mentors. Reflection
on practice, self-esteem, and new learning are just a few rewards of mentoring.
Regularly scheduled meetings also help to alleviate the isolation teachers
sometimes feel and enhance the sense of the school as a community of learners.
To
see the complete article, please go to:
http://www.mec.edu/mascd/docs/villani2.htm
Participation
in dance classes and music classes are associated with an increased chance of a
student pursuing a college degree, but art classes or visits to the public
library are not, according to recent research by sociologists.
Jay
Gabler, a Harvard University doctoral student, and Jason Kaufman, a professor
of sociology at Harvard University, looked at which extracurricular activities
and attributes increase students' likelihood of attending college, including
elite institutions, and which do not. They found that some extracurricular
activities increase a student's probability of attending college and prestigious
institutions, but grades, test scores, and family background matter more.
Gabler
and Kaufman's research uses data from the National Educational Longitudinal
Study (NELS), which asked thousands of students hundreds of questions about
their activities and achievements at home and at school. The NELS also gathers
information about students' families and communities.
"Grades
and standardized test scores matter a great deal, as do parents' income and
education," said Gabler and Kaufman. "Even when we consider these,
however, we find that participation in some extracurricular activities in high
school makes it much more likely that a student will go on to college."
Participation
in varsity team sports makes matriculation to college more likely, but attributes
such as English as a student's first language or whether parents limit TV do
not matter much.
The
results changed somewhat when the researchers looked at admission to highly
selective colleges (according to rankings from U.S. News & World Report for
the year respondents were college-shopping). Surprisingly few extracurricular
activities increase students' likelihood of college matriculation. When it
comes to elite schools, participation in sports, student council, and music or
dance lessons do not matter, but involvement in the yearbook or the school
newspaper do make a difference. Participation in a school hobby club makes a
student much more likely to attend a selective school, too.
A
most interesting finding, according to Gabler and Kaufman, is that "students
whose parents visited art museums regularly were much more likely to attend an
elite college than students whose parents did not. It does not even matter
whether the students themselves visit museums." This was one of the
strongest effects the researchers observed.
This
finding is related to what the eminent sociologist Pierre Bourdieu called
cultural capital, said Gabler and Kaufman. In other words, knowledge about
elite cultures (for example, fine art) is an asset as much as money or social
connections are. Even on a college application or a college interview, these
differences are likely to be apparent. They also hypothesize that cultural
taste may increase their likelihood of applying to elite schools in the first
place.
This
research focuses on college matriculation, which requires that students must
complete these steps: apply to, gain admission to, and enroll in college.
Gabler and Kaufman are currently following up with additional research (with
Harvard graduate student Nathan Fosse) to examine each of these steps
individually. "We're interested in what predicts students' admission to
college," say the researchers, "but it may be more important to
understand why most students never even apply."
Gabler
and Kaufman conclude by noting, "There are no magic bullets.... Only a few
activities matter, and the most important predictors in our data have to do
with family background rather than extracurricular activities."
It's
a feeling nearly everyone remembers experiencing at least once: sitting in
class unprepared, silently praying the teacher won't call your name.
For
those students, the days of quiet safety may be numbered.
A
new University of Florida study suggests that when teachers use a hand-held
computer that randomly chooses whom to call on, even the quiet student in the
back won't be missed.
And
that may not be a bad thing. It turns out students actually do better in class
when they know their number could come up at any time.
Paige
Allison, who did the research for her dissertation in educational anthropology
at UF, found that students at one North Central Florida high school where she
conducted her research reported they were more engaged in the activities of
school success when teachers used the name generator.
"The
interview data from the teachers and students shows this technique helped
students do those things that we know help them to be successful in school
– paying attention, being prepared for class, staying focused and doing
homework," Allison said.
Allison,
who teaches high school math, said she became interested in doing the study
after listening to a radio report describing how math teachers call on boys
more than girls.
"There
is real, although subtle intimidation that takes place in the classroom
reinforcing the idea that women and minority students cannot do math as well as
white male students," she said. "Research has shown that teachers not
only tend to call on white male students more frequently than other students,
but they respond to their questions and requests for help differently and
provide them with entirely different experiences in the classroom."
One
reason girls can get less attention in math class is that teachers may find
themselves calling on boys, who tend to be more assertive in class, Allison
said.
"People
aren't aware of how hard a teacher physically has to work, not only to manage
but to actually teach 150 children a day," she said. "As in any
activity, the natural tendency is to want to conserve energy. It's easier and
faster to let the student who knows the answer respond for you. So the quiet
person in the corner who doesn't raise a hand doesn't get called on as
much."
Often,
teachers may call on students as a way to keep them on task or stop misbehavior,
Allison said. "In an effort to maintain order in the classroom, teachers
respond to this kind of pressure," she said. "When I became aware of
the research on this subject, I noticed that I called on boys more than girls
as kind of a behavior control management device."
Mathematics
is important because it is a gate-keeping course for many college preparatory
courses that lead to high-paying scientific and technical fields, yet
math-related careers are not sought by females and minorities to the same
extent as white males, she said.
To
test the effectiveness of a random naming system, Allison compared
participation rates of students in 15 math classes where the device was used
with students in 11 math classes where it was not used.
Contrary
to expectations, the study found no significant difference between classes that
used the new experimental technique and those where teachers called on students
according to their own methods, Allison said. This showed that teachers at this
particular school did not show bias in calling on one gender or ethnic group
more than another, she said.
The
random questioning device was effective, she said, because students who
participated in a series of focus groups afterward said they were more likely
to show up for class prepared and to concentrate on what was being said when
they knew the computer could spell out their name at any time.
"Both
students and teachers reported that students paid more attention in
class," she said. "They felt they had to tune in more because they
knew they had a chance of being called on for every question."
To
make the computerized name-generating system non-threatening, Allison allowed
students who were called on to take a free "pass" without penalty if
they did not know the answer or did not wish to respond for some reason.
Jerome
Dancis, a University of Maryland math professor emeritus, said Allison's
research is important because only a small number of students are willing to
raise their hands in class, usually the best students. "It's important for
teachers to realize that students need to be encouraged to speak in class,
especially high school students because this is a shy age," he said.
Students
who had block scheduling enjoyed no advantage in college science compared to
peers who had traditional class schedules in high school, according to Robert
Tai, assistant professor of science education at the University of Virginia's
Curry School of Education. In fact, they performed worse, he said.
In
an article published in the April/May issue of the High School Journal, Tai and
co-authors Kirsten Dexter, a biology teacher in Greene County who earned her
master's degree at the Curry School, and Philip Sadler of the Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for Astrophysics, looked at a national sample of 8,000 introductory
college science students from 31 states, many of whom went to high schools that
use block scheduling.
Block
scheduling is a way of structuring the school day so that students have fewer
classes for longer periods of time. The most common type comprises classes that
last for 90 minutes alternating two or three days a week, in contrast with the
traditional schedule of classes that run 45-55 minutes and are held every day. Increasingly
adopted over the past 15 years, the schedule remains a subject of debate.
Claimed as a way to help prepare students better for college, Tai found that
was not the case when students in introductory biology, chemistry and physics
courses were surveyed.
"Final
college course grades are a real-world measure with long-term impacts,"
Tai said. "Even when students had teachers who used instruction methods
specifically geared toward block scheduling, the students who had a traditional
schedule had better grades in college."
With
the additional pressure of the No Child left Behind Act, schools are trying to
help all students graduate and pursue an education beyond high school,"
Dexter said. "We need to create an educational environment that helps
facilitate success in college, and if something is inhibiting the preparation,
it needs to be fixed."
Block
scheduling was sold as a way that students would learn much better, especially
in the sciences, Tai said, but they're doing worse.
It
may be harder for some students to grasp the material in a longer block of
time, Tai said. Plus, if a student misses a class, he or she misses more of the
subject matter. Even peer tutoring didn't end up helping the students in block
scheduling.
"An
hour and a half is a long time for high school students to stay in one
class," said Dexter, who teaches high-school biology and has taught in a
variety of schedules.
The
90-minute classes also are hard on the teachers, she added. It takes more
energy and more time to plan enough activities to fill the period. Although
many teachers regard longer laboratory sessions as beneficial, students report
that teaching methods differ little whether in long or short classes.
Over
the school year, block scheduling also costs the students class time, the
researchers found. A 50-minute class held every day for two weeks equals 500
minutes of class time, whereas a 90-minute block class held five times in two
weeks (on alternate days) equals 450 minutes. In addition, more time may be
lost in the class period as a teacher changes from one activity to another.
"This
is not advantageous," Tai said.
The
survey sample includes the higher-performing students who went to four-year
colleges and controls for students' backgrounds. And if these top high school
students are doing worse, Tai continued, we could extrapolate that it must be
even harder for struggling students. Block scheduling does not appear to be a
better option. When schools go through all the changes of switching to block
scheduling, even if there was no difference, it wouldn't be worth it.
Harvard's
Sadler adds, "Instead, schools should invest in changes that have been
shown to produce large student gains and that are backed by rigorous research
studies."
The April/May
2006 issue of the High School Journal is available online at: http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/high_school_journal/toc/hsj89.4.html
By
Sarah Theule Lubienski and Christopher Lubienski
A
RECENT report of mathematics results from the National Assessment of
Educational Progress (NAEP) highlighted this "major finding":
"Public-school students scored lower on average than non-public-school
students at both grades 4 and 8." Of course, this finding is nothing new.
Indeed, it is part of the common wisdom in the United States that private
school students outscore public school students on standardized tests.
Furthermore, studies have suggested that this is true even when researchers
account for the fact that the enrollment at public schools differs from the
enrollment at private schools.
This
belief is based, in part, on past studies involving the 1980 High School and
Beyond dataset that found that private schools are more effective than public
schools at boosting student achievement, including that of disadvantaged
students.2 These studies of test performance, which controlled for some
potentially confounding variables such as socioeconomic status (SES), affirmed
widespread assumptions about the superiority of private schools. These
assumptions, in turn, have influenced recent reform efforts promoting various
forms of privatization of public schools, including the No Child Left Behind
Act, which makes use of a variety of private sector sanctions for
"failing" public schools...
(W)ithin
each SES quartile, the public school mean is actually higher than that of the
corresponding private school mean at both grades 4 and 8. Specifically, public
school fourth-grade means were 6 to 7 points higher than private school means
within each SES quartile, and eighth-grade differences favoring public schools
ranged from 1 to 9 points.
This
situation is a classic case of Simpson's Paradox: although within each
subgroup, public school means are higher than private school means, the overall
private school means are higher than public school means because of the larger
proportion of higher-SES students in private schools. These results call into
question common assumptions about public and private school effects and
highlight the importance of carefully considering SES differences when making
comparisons of school achievement.
To
see full report please go to:
http://www.pdkintl.org/kappan/k_v86/k0505lub.htm
A
new report by the Thomas B. Fordham Institute finds that at a time of rapid
globalization, most states don't even try to provide young Americans with a
solid grounding in world history.
Renowned
historian and foreign policy expert Walter Russell Mead, the Henry A. Kissinger
senior fellow for U.S. foreign policy at the Council on Foreign Relations,
conducted this first ever review of states' academic standards for K-12 world
history—the blueprints that outline what students are expected to know in
a given subject. Fully two-thirds of states earn a "D" or an
"F," while only eight (California, Massachusetts, Virginia, Indiana,
Georgia, New York, Minnesota, and South Carolina) earn an "A."
"At
a time when the United States faces threats and competitors around the globe,
and when our children's future is more entangled than ever with world
developments, our schools ought not treat world history so casually," said
Institute president Chester E. Finn, Jr. "Nations that once were little
more than curiosities to most Americans have transformed themselves into places
of vital interest and concern. No one can be considered adequately prepared for
life in the 21st century unless they understand the history and culture of the
world's major civilizations. The National Geographic Society recently reported
that students don't think learning about the world is all that important.
Sadly, state officials don't seem to think so, either. It's as if Americans
were wearing blinders—and happy about it."
Mead
finds that only a handful of states require students to pass a world history
test to graduate or get promoted to the next grade. Given educators'
preoccupation with subjects tested under the No Child Left Behind Act, this
only increases the chances that world history will be "narrowed" out
of the curriculum.
"A
working knowledge of world history is socially, politically, economically, and
culturally indispensable for young Americans," said Mead. "The
failure of public schools to teach world history amounts to denying equal
opportunity to our most vulnerable populations. Millions of low-income and
minority students are being denied basic cultural and economic rights."
Several
problems were ubiquitous in the standards of poorly performing states:
* Little or no historical
content;
* Alternatively, so much
content that teachers couldn't possibly begin to cover it all;
* An excessive focus on
modern European history and neglect of significant non-Western cultures in
Latin America and Asia;
* Alternatively, an extreme
multiculturalism that treats all nations and cultures as equally significant;
* Standards that are buried
in the murky non-subject of "social studies."
* Standards that provide
students with no logical timeline, relying instead on trendy "themes"
without regard to the story of history.
Mead
notes that states get their lowest marks for their coverage of Latin America.
Only 9 states directly reference Simon Bolivar, perhaps the most well-known
figure in Latin American history. And only 6 states make mention of famed
explorer Hernando Cortez.
"At
a time when we're in the middle of a great national debate about how to
assimilate the massive influx of immigrants from Latin America, it's
unconscionable that the states would consider a student well-educated without
knowing much of anything about the history of this region," said Mead.
"Today's students will be critical players in working out terms of
accommodation and assimilation between Latin-American culture and
Anglo-American culture. They desperately need a firm grounding in the history
of our hemisphere."
One
Bright Spot: World History Exams
Mead
also reviewed three major world history exams: the Advanced Placement (AP), the
SAT II, and the New York Regents exam. In 2005, more than 64,000 students took
the AP World History exam, and a stunning 220,000-plus took the New York
Regents Exam in World History. (Some 15,000 took the SAT II World History test
in 2004.) While the AP exam is the best, all three tests earned an
"A" rating.
"National
exams in world history can and should put pressure on the states to get their
heads out of the sand and produce sound world history standards," said
Finn. "The number of young people taking these exams is soaring, and they
deserve the chance to do well on them. States could go far toward improving
their world-history standards if they modeled them on the syllabi of exams like
these."
Recommendations
States
can take several actions to improve their world history standards, including:
* Follow the lead of
high-scoring states, using the A-rated standards as a model;
* Emphasize the importance
of world history by requiring students to pass a test in the subject to
graduate, and/or hold schools accountable for their pupils' performance in the
subject; and
* Build the state's
high-school world history program around the excellent Advanced Placement
syllabus in this subject.
Complete
state and exam reviews, as well as the full text of the report, can be found at
http://www.edexcellence.net/foundation/publication/publication.cfm?id=356&CFID=6642400&CFTOKEN=76632561
A new
Education Trust analysis of teacher-equity plans prepared by all 50 states and
the District of Columbia finds that most states failed to properly analyze data
that would determine whether poor and minority children get more than their
fair share of unqualified, inexperienced, and out-of-field teachers. Only two
states, Nevada and Ohio, fully complied with the requirements and offered
specific plans to remedy inequities.
As a
result, the Ed Trust report released today recommends that the U.S. Department
of Education reject the overwhelming majority of plans and require states to start
over – this time with clearer guidance from the federal government on
what is required by the law.
"Research
is clear that teachers make the difference in how much students learn, said
Heather Peske, the Education Trust senior associate who directed the analysis.
"We can't close achievement gaps without confronting the gaps in access to
teacher quality for low-income and minority students."
The No
Child Left Behind Act not only requires states to guarantee that 100 percent of
core academic classes are taught by "highly qualified" teachers, but
also to "ensure that poor and minority children are not taught at higher
rates than other children by inexperienced, unqualified or out of field
teachers."
After years
of ignoring this provision of the law, the U.S. Department of Education
required that state leaders submit data on the distribution of teachers by July
7 -- along with their plans to fix it.
Sadly, most
states missed the mark.
To comply with
the law, each state had to look at inequality in four areas:
.
Whether low-income
students are more
likely than other students to be assigned to unqualified or out-of-field
teachers in core
academic courses;
.
Whether minority
students are more
likely than other students to be assigned to unqualified or out-of-field
teachers in core
academic courses;
.
Whether low-income
students are more
likely than other students to be taught by inexperienced teachers;
.
Whether minority
students are more
likely than other students to be taught by inexperienced teachers.
Unfortunately,
the majority of states did not look at all four areas of inequality. Only three
states - Ohio, Nevada, and Tennessee – examined all four components. New
York also offered some analysis of the four measures.
But most
states simply didn't comply with the law – and had little guidance from
the U.S. Department of Education to help them do so.
Of the
plans submitted, 34 states only focused on one area of the equity analysis -- the
percentage of classes taught by highly qualified teachers in high-poverty
schools compared to low-poverty schools. Only 10 states appropriately analyzed
whether minority students were taught disproportionately by teachers who were
not highly qualified. Only four states examined whether students from
low-income families were taught by inexperienced teachers, and only three
looked whether minority students were taught disproportionately by
inexperienced teachers.
More than
half of the states (27) asserted that by simply meeting the highly qualified
teacher (HQT) requirements of NCLB, they would also meet the teacher-equity
requirements. This is insufficient because it ignores inequality in whether
poor and minority students are more likely to be assigned to inexperienced
teachers.
Furthermore,
some states failed to acknowledge that merely complying with HQT provisions
does not address the problem of out-of-field teaching in schools that serve
low-income children and children of color. For example, a teacher who is only
highly qualified in social studies might be assigned to teach math classes.
Two states
-- Nevada and Ohio -- stand out for examining all four measures of inequality
and for devising strategies targeted at fixing the inequitable distribution of
unqualified and inexperienced teachers.
Nevada did
what no other state did and submitted three equity plans: a state plan, and
plans from the state's two districts that serve the most low-income and
minority students, Clark (Las Vegas) and Washoe (Reno) counties. All three of
Nevada's plans include specific, targeted strategies for the equitable
distribution of teacher talent.
Additionally,
Clark County's plan includes innovative strategies, such as giving principals
in high-need schools two extra months to consider teacher-transfer requests
before principals in other schools can recruit them.
Ohio
describes 68 specific strategies to balance the distribution of highly
qualified and experienced teachers. Further, each of these strategies is supported
by data and analysis conducted by the state and includes progress measures,
public-reporting mechanisms and state monitoring plans.
While many
states mentioned interesting programs, no other state's submission amounted to
a plan for ensuring that poor and minority students get the teachers they
deserve.
"Concentrating
inexperienced teachers in schools with poor and minority students puts these
students at an educational disadvantage. States have to accept responsibility
on this issue in order to close achievement gaps," Peske said. "This
is fundamentally about fairness and equality of opportunity."
Three
states – Missouri, New Mexico, and Utah – have yet to submit a
plan. Instead, they informed the Department of Education that they would
submit plans in the future.
Other
states, among them Iowa and North Dakota, determined that they had no
inequities in the distribution of unqualified and inexperienced teachers, but
based their decisions on flawed methods of analysis.
"While
it's clear the states put a lot of time and energy into these submissions, it's
also clear that we don't yet have real plans to achieve equity," said Ross
Wiener, Education Trust policy director. "If these plans are accepted by
the Department of Education, then we will have gone through an exercise that
purports to address inequality, but injustice will persist," he said.
The Ed
Trust recommends:
á The U.S
Department of Education reject the overwhelming majority of equity plans and
provide states with more explicit guidance on what is required under the
provisions for their second attempt;
á States
ensure full public participation in the development of equity plans, including the
inclusion of advocates for low-income communities and communities of color. The
new plans should set measurable goals and a clear process for public reporting
on progress;
á The
Secretary of Education create a new, high-level position to focus on teacher
quality issues;
á Title I
and Title II state administrative funds be conditional, and only given to
states that comply with teacher-equity requirements on clear timelines;
á State
data systems be improved to support the equity analyses.
"We
can't close the achievement gap without squarely confronting and remedying
disparities in teacher quality," Wiener said. "These equity plans
were supposed to be a first step toward honestly facing up to the problem.
Unfortunately, they don't even come close."
For full
report please go to:
http://www2.edtrust.org/EdTrust/Press+Room/Teacher+Equity+Plans+Embargoed+Release.htm
In 2005,
all 50 governors made an unprecedented commitment to provide educators,
policymakers and the public with much-needed information about one of the most
critical indicators of success for our public education system -- high school
graduation rates. But a report out today updating the public on the
implementation of that agreement is a reminder of how much work remains to
accurately account for the students who graduate from American high schools.
The report, issued by the National Governors Association, reveals
three serious problems with the way states are carrying out their commitment to
improve high school graduation data.
First, most states have not moved to make the graduation-rate definition agreed
to by their governors part of official state policy.
Second,
most states aren't taking the necessary actions to start reporting more
accurate graduation rates right now. Instead, most are waiting for more sophisticated
longitudinal data systems -- which in some cases are years away from being up
and running -- before taking any steps to improve graduation-rate data.
Third,
even among states where better data are being produced, some still plan to use
inaccurate numbers for accountability purposes under the No Child Left Behind
law.
Codifying
the Compact
Since
the Compact was signed, only two states have moved to formally adopt the Compact's
graduation-rate definition into state policy. Led by a coalition of
African-American and Latino legislators, Maryland adopted comprehensive new
legislation to carry out all of the commitments of the governors' agreement. In
Colorado, the state board of education issued new regulations adopting the
Compact's graduation-rate definition. More states should follow the lead of
Maryland and Colorado.
Postponing
Progress
Development
of longitudinal data systems that track individual students over time is
critically important – not just for graduation-rate purposes but for
understanding, evaluating and improving public education.
Unfortunately,
many states are waiting until they have these systems in place before providing
more accurate data. This approach ignores states' ability (and their obligation
under the Compact) to begin immediately reporting better estimates. States can
and should use school-level data that is already collected -- on enrollment,
diploma recipients, and transfers in and out -- to start calculating graduation
rates according to the Compact definition. Colorado and South Carolina are
doing just that. Other states should follow their lead and not let the pursuit
of ever-better data systems serve as an excuse to postpone reporting better
data.
In addition, states also need to take immediate steps to train local officials
in proper data collection and reporting techniques and to establish auditing
protocols to catch problems in local reporting.
To see the
full report, please go to:
A new
WestEd book offers practical advice for districts engaged in continuous school
improvement. Building on a three-year study, the authors have created a district
action guide with concrete activities designed to help district personnel
understand whether they are on track to help — and not hinder —
their local schools' efforts to raise student achievement.
WestEd
researchers concluded that leaders in successful districts:
- align their
efforts to a shared theory about how to achieve school improvement;
- engage in
frequent, open communication and establish a common vocabulary with each other
and their schools; and
- maintain focus
in the face of external demands and distractions.
"We
provide technical assistance to central office administrators in implementing
this inquiry process, and we see firsthand how urgently schools need district
support to close persistent achievement gaps," says Kim Agullard, Program
Associate in WestEd's Comprehensive School Assistance Program.
Coauthor
Dolores Goughnour adds, "The good news? If district leaders take a
coherent, consistent, research-based approach in both their improvement-related
communications and their improvement structures, then they will foster school
improvement."
Schools
working to raise student achievement need the help of an organized, focused
central office. Yet many districts lack unified direction, agreement on the central
office role in supporting school improvement, and coherence and alignment
between goals and strategies. Drawing on the findings of a three-year study of
several districts focused on improving their schools, Central Office
Inquiry: Assessing Organization, Roles, and Functions to Support School
Improvement is
intended to help central office leadership and staff examine their
organizational arrangement, their enacted roles, and their day-to-day
activities, critically questioning both their theories of action and how their
work is concretely helping the schools they serve.
For more information, please go to:
http://www.wested.org/cs/we/view/rs/814