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Posts Tagged ‘curriculum’

Really, what’s up with those people in Kansas?  There they go again, pushing some crazy-ass notion, out of step with the nation…  Except, um, maybe this time they’re onto something.

GT listservs are humming with the news that Kansas City, Missouri schools are experimenting with the elimination of grade levels, following on the heels of the schools in Colorado and Alaska.  Here’s the Kansas story as it appeared in EdWeek the other day.

Forget Grade Levels, Kansas City, Mo., Schools Try Something New

…Students—often of varying ages—work at their own pace, meeting with teachers to decide what part of the curriculum to tackle. Teachers still instruct students as a group if it’s needed, but often students are working individually or in small groups on projects that are tailored to their skill level.

For instance, in a classroom learning about currency, one group could draw pictures of pennies and nickels. A student who has mastered that skill might use pretend money to practice making change.

Students who progress quickly can finish high school material early and move forward with college coursework. Alternatively, in some districts, high-schoolers who need extra time can stick around for another year.  Advocates say the approach cuts down on discipline problems because advanced students aren’t bored and struggling students aren’t frustrated….

Now the “drawing pictures of pennies” gives me pause, but I’m guessing (hoping) this is a lower elementary lesson, a simple example the reporter latched onto to make a point.  Further into the article it quotes a student who “used to get bored after plowing through his assignments. He had to bring books from home or the library if he wanted a challenge because the ones at his old school were one or two grade levels too easy.”  His parents moved him into the district specifically for the experimental approach, and are thrilled:  “I wish school was like this when I was growing up,” said the dad.

So yes, that cry of “Hallelujah!” you’re hearing across the nation at this news is from parents of GT kids, frustrated beyond belief by the arbitrary barriers posed by lockstep age/grade-based education.  You know, the “but what will we do if we run out of curriculum?”

Could the Kansas experiment ever happen in Montgomery County?  Let’s just say I’m not holding my breath.  Note that these initiatives are happening in school systems described as “bedraggled” and “low performing” with “abysmal test scores.”  That alone could make the idea a non-starter here in Lake Wobegone, where we’re an urban school district only when it suits our purposes.  Or, one could expect the PR jujitsu approach favored by the good Dr. Weast, wherein–wait for it–it’s touted that MCPS is already doing this!  “We have blah, blah, blah number of X graders taking Y grade math–in elementary school! Blah, blah, blah number of X graders taking Y grade math–in middle school!  Highest number of AP tests in the nation…”  Well, you get the point.

But that’s not to say that this approach isn’t needed.  The current GT screening and articulation process, and the piloted SIPPI process both operate under the official notion that “students may accelerate learning and participate in advanced-level course work at their local schools.” (This from the MCPS Strategic Plan, Our Call to Action).  Sounds lovely, but eyeballing sample screen shots of the Course Placement and Articulation data screens shows that in cases where a grade level of acceleration is recommended (and the school and MCPS recommendations always jibe) the only areas where acceleration can take place are math and reading, with the recommended intervention/remedy for reading being William and Mary.  Local GT advocates remain unconvinced that there is a “continuum of services” available at local schools, rather that–as one advocate waggishly put it–MCPS’s identification and articulation process is “a bridge to nowhere.”  If there is acceleration available, it is only within strictly drawn parameters.  As the Singam case and others show, it takes extraordinary pressure, or a principal willing to buck the system (equally extraordinary) to accommodate the more-numerous-than-one-would-suspect outlier kids who need more than in-grade William and Mary or one or two years of math.  And let’s remember that the whole idea of what constitutes “grade level” is suspect, with MCPS itself having admitted that that a child performing just fine at grade level would not be prepared to meet it’s vaunted 7 Keys to College readiness.

I would love to see MCPS embrace true experimentation of the kind happening in Kansas, Colorado and Alaska.  Charter school anyone?  Oh, never mind.

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Sold!  To Pearson Education!

This week brought the news that the school board has sold out MCPS’s elementary curriculum development (We’ll leave aside the fact that the press release was up even before the board voted on the deal.  Ugh.)  While MCPS minced no words on its wonderfulness, others, including Valerie Strauss of the Post were less than enthusiastic.

Count me in. The prospect of MCPS classrooms serving as showrooms and teachers as salespersons is beyond distasteful.  Yes, the deal does help MCPS develop this curriculum faster, but at what cost?  The publisher can can make changes and still sell it under the MCPS “brand”–and MCPS only gets a 60% discount on the end products it buys.  But hey, MCPS lost its shame long ago and one could argue that this deal is what that $10 million MCPS PR machine has been working so hard towards all along.

It’s why MCPS–in a week where Superintendent Jerry Weast said “We are broke” (See video here) in response to Board member Laura Berthiaume’s brave, brave vote against the Pearson deal (See video here)–is hiring a Senior Communications Specialist for a salary of between $71,723-$100,120 with “excellent benefits.”  This, is an climate where we can take teachers out of an award-winning program, the Einstein Visual Arts Center.  This, in a climate where an award-winning middle school choral program is being slashed.

It just freaking boggles the mind.  Have to keep churning out the happy happy news.

So what is this wonderful integrated curriculum, that has already been rolled out in Kindergarten?  You can read the Superintendent’s report here.  The press release claims that “Ten years ago, in order to provide an academic structure to support higher achievement, MCPS rewrote and mapped its curriculum, instruction and assessments to college-ready standards.”  Au contraire.  I and others have blogged about this in the past, but MCPS itself has said that its “grade level” curriculum is not sufficient to achieve the vaunted Seven Keys to College Readiness.  That’s why MCPS now has over 40% of students identified as “gifted,” also known as “ready to work above grade level.”  Just to repeat, that’s not the same thing.

The report and the press release cite “extremely positive reviews” by parents of  the new Kindergarten curriculum.  I don’t know about you, but this thread on DC Urban Moms and Dads doesn’t make me feel the love.

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MCPS talks a good game about “Success for Every Student.” The new curriculum page on their website declares:

The MCPS curriculum serves all learners. It includes the basics — language arts, mathematics, science, social studies, and the arts. It supports exceptional children — those with disabilities, the highly able, and English language learners….

I would beg to differ, and nothing demonstrates the disconnect more clearly than the planned halving of the Visual Arts Center at Einstein High School (VAC). 50% of the VAC staff (one of the two teachers) is being cut from the budget.

Never heard of the VAC?  Neither had I until about two years ago.  It’s a small program, not as flashy as the Blair Math Science Computer Magnet.  But it fills a critically important niche for those students who excel in the visual arts and don’t plan to march lock-step into a STEM career.  Or rack up APs for that matter.  Check out the Seven Keys to College Readiness again.  See any art there?  Nope.  Make no mistake, those Keys are the priorities that are truly driving your child’s education. (For that matter, there’s no writing, science or social studies there either.)  But art matters. A lot.  Just read what Prof. Ellen Winner (wife of Multiple Intelligences guru Howard Gardner) has to say. Heck, read what I have to say.

I was slow off the mark blogging this because I’ve been up-to-my-eyeballs busy (Sorry Sue!)  However here’s some important background information that’s been making the rounds of area listservs:

  1. The VAC is nationally known and respected. Recruiters from the nation’s best art schools and liberal arts colleges compete for VAC graduates. Fully 100% of VAC students go to college.
  2. The two VAC teachers won the Montgomery County Executive’s Award for excellence in education last October, and Ike Leggett personally presented the county’s most prestigious award to the VAC teachers in a ceremony at Strathmore Hall. Kristy Callaway, executive director of the International Network of Schools for the Advancement of Arts Education, who charts trends in the field, called the VAC among the “top-tier programs” of its kind anywhere.
  3. Cutting the VAC staff in half isn’t fair. It exceeds other program reductions and imperils the VAC’s future. The VAC has only two teachers, no administrative funding support, and no transportation funding. It is already as lean as possible.
  4. The VAC serves Montgomery County. Students from 11 high schools attend the VAC this year. Unlike other magnets, it accepts sophomores and juniors. It is also unusually diverse for a magnet: 43% of the 74 students this year are students of color.
  5. The VAC serves Einstein. VAC students perform well academically, and garner awards and recognition for the school. They paint murals and posters, design sets, and otherwise help to enliven the school and other community facilities. The annual art show attracts outside interest to Einstein.
  6. The VAC gives aspiring artists, fashion designers, film makers, and art educators a place to thrive including many who otherwise might struggle. Many large school systems offer special schools for the arts, but our school district – the largest in Maryland and the 16th largest in the country – offers only a two-teacher program for our top art students. It deserves our support.
  7. One teacher should not teach all the students in an intense, four-year program of two to three periods a day. Two teachers allow complementary, alternating semesters These two teachers meet with every parent, and help all their students to apply for scholarships and other honors. The results are remarkable.

I’ll add an eighth point:  The students served by this program by and large cannot afford to get their art yayas out at pricey Corcoran or Interlochen summer classes.

UPDATE: I’ll add a ninth point:  The VAC is part of MCPS’s “continuum of gifted education services.”  That’s right.  The VAC is a program for “students whose needs can’t be met in the home school.”  Bottomline, this is a gifted education program.  Check the COMAR language:

(18) “Gifted and talented” means an elementary or secondary school student who is identified by professionally qualified individuals as having outstanding abilities in one or more of the following areas:

(a) General intellectual capabilities;

(b) Specific academic aptitudes; or

(c) Creative, visual, or performing arts.

How did we get to this juncture?  Thank the good Dr. Weast, whose 2010-2011 budget reduces the number of teaching positions (cuts to central office…not so much).  The cluster superintendents instruct the principals on how many positions to cut, and then it’s left to the principals to make the hard choices.  When the numbers on the line are those math and reading scores, one can easily see why a program like the VAC would be at risk. And the Board of Ed?  As Janis Sartucci of the Parents Coalition has written, “[W]hen parents complain to the Board of Education they can throw up their hands and say ‘too bad, so sad, we didn’t make the decision to cut X program or X class’.”

Bottom line:  A 50% cut to this two-teacher program will prove devastating.  (Only two teachers to serve artistically gifted students in the county?  It’s an embarrassment.)

If you’re in Montgomery County, please consider emailing the Board of Education at  boe@mcpsmd.org.  Other folks to e-mail include:

Superintendent of schools: Jerry_D_Weast@mcpsmd.org

Community Superintendent: Bronda Mills: Bronda_L_Mills@mcpsmd.org

Montgomery County Council education committee:

  • Phil Andrews: Councilmember.Andrews@montgomerycountymd.gov
  • Mike Knapp: Councilmember.Knapp@montgomerycountymd.gov
  • Valerie Ervin: Councilmember.ervin@montgomerycountymd.gov

Montgomery County Executive Isiah “Ike” Leggett:
ocemail@montgomerycountymd.gov

You can also join this Facebook fanpage:  Save the Visual Arts Center at Einstein.

All kinds of kids deserve to have their needs met, their talents fostered.

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Last week I thought I had really put my foot in it with a friend.  She has an extremely bright and creative 3rd grader and I realized that the deadline (Monday, November 9) for the Centers for the Highly Gifted was fast approaching .  So I gave her a call and in the course of the conversation sort of wove in, “So…are you going to apply?”  When she said “No, I don’t know what I would put on the form” I just about had a heart attack.  Reflecting on my reaction, I worried I had seriously overstepped.

But then late yesterday afternoon she sent me an email.  Could I come over that evening to talk about the application?  She and her husband were stumbling on the first question:  “What advanced learning need has your child demonstrated that you believe MAY NOT BE EASILY MET IN HIS OR HER LOCAL SCHOOL PROGRAMS.”   Sure, I wrote her.  She emailed back; another friend was  also going to come over.  By the time I arrived, there was yet another friend there for soup and chat.  (My friend is like that.)  Little did I know that I was going to be the evening’s “featured speaker.”

However it turned out really well.  We had a good, thoughtful discussion about giftededness, MCPS, the Centers, their home school, education.  For my part, it was very informative to hear their concerns about both home school and Center program, and to get their impressions of the MCPS presentations they had sat through.  And they told me they appreciated my perspective and the chance to actually talk this stuff through, because the focus had been so much on the process of applying.

So what were my main points?

  • My starting point for all of this is that the Center might not be great for every GT kid, but at minimum a parent shouldn’t cut off the opportunity by not even applying.  If your child gets in, you can always say no.  If they attend but don’t like it, they can always go back to their neighborhood school.
  • There was some concern that kids in a GT program would get an “attitude,” that they would feel superior to other kids.  My response?  Kids in a regular classroom who are always at the top, who always finish their work before others, are getting no favors.  Contrary to what one might think, condescension (not to mention behavior problems) can actually breed in that situation.  Whereas when you put gifted kids with other kids at their readiness level, they may realize for the first time that they aren’t the best, that there are others smarter than them.  Learning to work and even struggle a bit is a good thing, as opposed to coasting through, never learning work habits and then having the consequences hit them later in life when the lesson is harder and it really matters.
  • Bottom line: Every child has a right to learn something during the six hours they are required to be in school.  They shouldn’t be used as tutors or “good influences” for other kids to their own detriment.
  • Diversity.  Yes, this has been a concern with GT programs in the county–that the Centers and Magnets are overwhelming White and Asian.  Encouragingly, my friend and her friends reported that the parents who showed up at the Center information meetings were extremely diverse.  Which brought me to my next point….
  • I think I planted some seeds of an “aha” moment when I explained that principals have an incentive NOT to have GT kids leave the building, especially minority kids.  Think about it.  Under No Child Left Behind schools live and die by their test scores.  Why would a school encourage a high achieving child–especially a minority child–to leave?  I mentioned it because….
  • I had heard through the grapevine that parents at this particular school had gotten the hard sell from their principal, that “whatever the Center can do, we can do  better.”   Sorry.  Just. Don’t. Buy. It.  In my humble opinion, the “GT” that could be offered would be the thin gruel of a smidge of William and Mary and math acceleration.  End of story.  Whereas at the Centers, students receive substantive writing and writing instruction; use of WordlyWise vocabulary books; creative, content-rich interdisciplinary science and social studies; truly differentiated and appropriately challenging reading instruction.  And of course grouping with peers, and the stimulation and understanding that comes with that, and teachers who understand more about giftedness than the average teacher.  Slam dunk.

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I’m pleased to direct you to a story that appears this week in our little bitty local freebie newspaper, The Takoma Voice.  But the story is anything but little bitty.

Sue Katz Miller, one very involved Takoma Park parent and most excellent writer, devotes her School Scene column to a question and answer with Denise Jones, a former NAACP Parents Council Representative.  Ms. Jones removed her daughter from MCPS, enrolled her in private school–and in this frank conversation talks gifted education in MCPS and why she ultimately decided to leave.  Do read it.  Trust me, it’s a must-read.

Hers is a rarely heard story.  But we here in the Red Zone, Down County part of Montgomery County know it’s not unusual.  Just last week I was getting on the Metro and ran into an African-American mom I know. She’s an environmental policy person; her husband is fluent in Russian and does foreign policy work.  We got to know a each other a few years ago while waiting in line to vote, and as it turned out she was a friend of a friend.  Our paths continued to cross, and whenever they did, talk inevitably turned to our kids, our elementary school and gifted education…or the lack thereof.  I remember one very deep conversation at a Christmas party and how frustrated she was.  Well, that morning on the Metro she told me that both of her kids are now attending a local private school.

Two more bright African-American students with well-educated, involved parents–gone.

The ones who leave and homeschool. The ones who go private.  Nope.  Not even on MCPS’s radar screen.  MCPS has no way of hearing, and more importantly no interest in hearing, why these families choose to leave.  If MCPS truly wishes to improve, to be a “learning community,” then it might start by listening to those who have said, “No, thanks.”

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You may recall a few months back that I wrote about the mega  boondoggle panel created by MCPS to review mathematics instruction.

Well the K-12 Mathematics Work Group is soliciting feedback from parents. The local PTA’s (not folks who left MCPS because of the math instruction, mind you, nor the GTA, which has been most active and vocal on the issue) have been asked to compile each school’s feedback and send it to the group by Oct. 23.

Questions to answer:

  • What aspects of the MCPS mathematics program do you consider to be strengths and do you believe should continue?
  • What aspects of the MCPS mathematics program would you like to see changed, improved, and/or enhanced?
  • Do you feel that your child is prepared with the mathematical knowledge he or she needs for his/her next steps? Next course? Why or why not? Explain.
  • What experiences has your child had, or what experiences do you wish your child had, that have made or would make your child stronger in mathematics?
  • What suggestions do you have to offer for the improvement of the MCPS mathematics teaching and learning program?

If you live in Montgomery County, here’s your chance to give them an earful.  Please email comments to math@mcpsmd.org by Friday October 23.

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Two weeks ago, when I learned about the unfolding drama surrounding Kumar Singam’s efforts to enroll his 9 year old daughter in an MCPS middle school (posts here and here), I wrote him an email:

… I wanted to let you know that I really, really empathize with you. Just last night my 15 year old who will be a sophomore at [deleted] was sobbing about how she didn’t want to go back to school because she feels like she is “spinning her wheels”….  MCPS refusal to accelerate students who need it–especially those who are verbally gifted–is a travesty….

The Singam case, and the resistance by MCPS officials to grade skipping, gave me a feeling of deja vu.  My daughter was never whole grade or radically subject accelerated.  Instead over the years we bought hook, line and sinker into every MCPS-touted GT program there was, with promises that “next year” it would “get better.” Nonetheless, by the time C. was in middle school, she was asking school officials for acceleration–or some kind of  intervention–ironically first in “GT” science class, but really in other classes as well. She self-advocated, as GT kids are often urged to do. And was brushed off–which is when things took a serious turn for the worse, to the point where we felt we had to withdraw, and were left no option but to homeschool. We were told by the magnet coordinator, “If she’s not happy in the magnet, she’s welcome to return to her home middle school.” Snort…As if. I had naively believed that the magnets were part of that “continuum of services” MCPS likes to talk about, where people would appreciate and “get” kids like mine and where we would work together to find a way to meet their needs. But clearly I was wrong. The magnet, I was told by the then-coordinator, was a “privilege.”

Fine. We withdrew C. The next month she took the SAT as part of the CTY Talent Search and got a freaking amazing score for a 12 year old.  (No, as it turns out, they probably didn’t “have many students who fit her profile.”)  What to do?  More to the point, what would MCPS do for this kid/with this kid if we wanted to re-enroll her for 8th grade?  Because she–we–could not return to the one program supposedly tailor-made for kids like her.  That relationship was shattered.  After countless phone calls and conversations with indifferent or clueless school system officials, I finally connected with someone in the Office of Accelerated and Enriched Instruction (since retired) who got it.  I mean, by that time I had met with so much resistance and hostility that I actually cried while on the phone with her.

Much like Mr. Singam, we met with someone from the Community Superintendent’s office.  We too believed that based on testing, our daughter needed to be placed beyond the norm for her age, namely high school.  MCPS didn’t want to go there; it was not even open for discussion.  Our fall back was that at minimum she needed access to high school English and social studies courses:  just as they arrange for very advanced math or foreign language middle school students to take classes at high school (and for which there is ample precedent) they should do the same for our child. Again, we could get no commitment from MCPS.  The best we could get was an offer of possible placement into the middle school housing the math/science/computer science magnet. (Not the magnet itself mind you, but just to be in building with other really bright age peers.  And they made that sound like a huge concession.).  Once there, we were told, this MCPS individual, the principal and someone from AEI would meet with us and personally build our child’s schedule.  However there was no assurance that she would receive high school level instruction, and by this point we were just too gun shy to take a risk–yet again–on an MCPS promise.  So we homeschooled another year, returning C. to an MCPS high school program that is the unspoken “service” at that level.

All should be great, no?  Well, actually no.  I mean, it’s a really great program and she’s getting vastly more than is available to most kids her age.  But she still has felt underchallenged in her strength areas.  For example she essentially had to repeat government last year (after sucessfully completing an equivalent college course).  To the credit of the coordinator there however, this year C. has been able to get permission to take an AP history class typically reserved for seniors. It’s her favorite class, the one where she feels she “belongs” intellectually and socially.  Clearly, this is a student who could have been radically subjected accelerated years earlier in her area of strength, the humanities, if allowed.  And no, I’m not pushing her.  She’s the one who is yearning for more challenge, for true intellectual engagement and risk taking, for the chance to get to college sooner in the hopes it will be there.

Recently we met a young man from elsewhere in the country who has grade skipped, someone C.’s age who will graduate this academic year–and she is angry that she never had that opportunity. To her, it feels as if MCPS has held her back every step of the way, and she has asked me “Why with MCPS is everything always a fight?”  I wish I had the answer.  All I know is that children like mine–and potentially Mr. Singam’s until he fought back–are being harmed–yes, that’s right, harmed–by MCPS’s refusal to deal with the realities of giftedness at the individual student level, to fully and truly meet their academic needs.  What kind of a toll does it take to be given the message year after year that it’s not okay to be who you are, that you must stifle and dampen your curiosity and passion to learn?

It’s because of these experiences that I have been following, and will continue to follow, the Singam case so closely.  By very vocally and fearlessly pushing MPCS to do the right thing by his daughter, Mr. Singam has forced truths about the system into the light that go against the happy feel good message they put out.  (It should be noted that many GT advocates have more than one child in the system and that the fear of retaliation is often what mutes their advocacy efforts.)   The Singam case reveals the lengths to which MCPS will go to put the institutional status quo above the needs of a student.  It reveals MCPS attitudes towards the legitimacy of homeschooling.  And it shows that the Centers, and middle school magnets are essentially mechanisms to hold the the brightest kids in MCPS from advancing too quickly.  Meanwhile in “regular” school there is no GT there “there.”

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As much as I blog about all this school system policy stuff, I didn’t necessarily set out to do so and feel that I truly am a newbie.  In my 10 years of having kids in MCPS I had never, until this academic year, attended a public meeting at MCPS headquarters.  I had never attended a Board of Education, MCCPTA or AEI meeting.  I had little to no idea who the “players” were.  It took me a few years as a PTA GT Liaison to even be clued in that there was a special listserv for us.  In this, I like to think that I’m fairly typical of a lot of MCPS parents.

So what changed?  Well, it slowly dawned on me that what I was experiencing with MCPS went far beyond simply individual experiences with this or that teacher, principal, school, program.  And that I wasn’t alone.  That there were others who had had similar experiences…we just had never had a chance or the ability to connect the dots.  Wrong was being done–and no one knew.   I started paying closer attention, seeking out places where I could learn more about what was happening.  And I realized that the system being as big as it is, you had to pay attention to what was happening on the macro level.  I’d been spinning my wheels on the micro.

As it turned out, the year I really started to pay attention was also the year MCPS decided to revise its gifted education policy.  The AEI Advisory Committee has been meeting for something like 18 months and it’s thanks largely to the reporting by GTA member Fred Stichnoth that we know anything at all about what has been discussed.

Our friendly rivals across the river, Fairfax County, it turns out, are also looking at “advanced education” practices (they, by the way, got rid of “Gifted and Talented” a few years ago, without a wimper of protest from GT parents.).  In contrast to the AEI Advisory Committee, which strikingly has not consulted ANY national experts to date, the Fairfax BOE has invited Dr. Sally Reis, “a national leader in gifted education,” to “make a presentation on research-based best practices in the field” this Monday.  The AEI Committee had a feel good, anecdotal presentation from the principals of the “no labels” “pilot programs.”

Dr. Reis’s report has been posted to the FCPS website in advance of the board meeting, and I embed it here for your reading pleasure.  As a parent of a gifted child, let me just say that it is satisfying to think that the highest levels of a school system’s leadership are being presented with this information.  Unfortunately, it’s not here in Montgomery County.

[Note:  It should be noted that Dr. Reis "is also interested in extensions of the Schoolwide Enrichment Model for both gifted and talented students and as a way to expand offerings and provide general enrichment to identify talents and potentials in students who have not been previously identified as gifted."  This is already raising flags among some Fairfax parents--who picks the "experts?"  Are they chosen by the GT office to validate their approach?  Will this be used to justify dismantling their Center programs?]

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