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Posts Tagged ‘humanities’

The other day Husband Dear pointed out a blogging milestone that slipped my notice:  sometime in the past month I exceeded 200,000 page views.  Thanks to everyone who’s stopped by and who continues to read my musings.

A milestone which most certainly did NOT escape attention took place this morning:  For the very last time, I drove C. to school.  Her last day ever as an MCPS student.  Hard to believe this MCPS chapter, such a huge part of our life for the past 10 years, has drawn to a close.  Seems like just yesterday that I stood with her on the playground as she lined up with her class for her very first day of first grade.  I didn’t have to drive her, and normally I don’t, but hey, it was her last exam and she needed the extra half hour of sleep.  Besides, she’s leaving in three months–I have to spend some time with my baby while I can!

So was C. the least bit wistful?  Um, no.  Not a bit. She attended the drama picnic a week ago and will miss her drama friends, but has no interest in attending her classwide picnic tomorrow afternoon.  Didn’t want to buy the yearbook.  Laughed how all of a sudden people who never talked to her were posting to her Facebook wall about how her leaving is a “betrayal” of the ol’ alma mater.  Nope, no looking back.

It’s a nice half hour drive to her school, so I asked, what were her reflections on this, her last day in MCPS?  What would she do differently, what should have been done differently?  Because one could argue, hey, it didn’t really turn out too badly.  You’re in the best school in the county (Newsweek says so!), and you’re leaving to go to one of the best boarding schools in the country.  Can you really complain?

Her answer, unequivocally, was that she should have been allowed to grade skip.  Really?  I pressed her.  Really, she insisted.  Socially, she has always gravitated to kids a grade, and more often several, ahead of her.  The teachers she looked back on most positively were the ones who understood, and gave her more challenging material beyond what was offered to everyone else.  The second grade teacher who gave her unlimited access to the library.  The third grade teacher who let her read different books from the rest of the class. Aha!  So doesn’t that just prove that MCPS does differentiate and that it works?  Alas, those teachers were, according to her, the grand exceptions.  The counter example would be offering to “reward” a verbally gifted kid with math acceleration and sitting in heterogeneous classes where all the other kids loath you because you “know everything” (being called “The Walking Dictionary” comes to mind) and you resenting them for being so painfully slow.  So much for having bright students serve as “role models” in the class.

I told her that it had recently been suggested that we could/should have pursued a legal remedy back in her middle school days.  Part of me so wanted to, however I also knew that legally gifted isn’t like special education. And really, when you are in the midst of the crisis, stressed beyond belief, does it really make sense to launch a lawsuit?  How is going to make the immediate situation at hand better?  Which sadly means that the system continues along, unchallenged.

I’ve suggested that she document her experiences and maybe even share them with members of the school board. Heck, ask to meet with Jerry Weast and Jay Mathews.  It’s what her friend up in the Boston area is doing.  Only he’s actually been invited by a member of the school committee to speak to them about the needs of “high-end learners.”  When’s the last time AEI ever asked students what they think of gifted education in MCPS?  Oh, that would be never.

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Not my ancestor

The initial rush from seeing relatives who you haven’t seen in awhile has worn off.  You’ve stuffed yourself with turkey.  The thought of hitting the malls gives you a rash.  Maybe the weather is bad and you’re cooped up in the house.  You’ve snuck out to check the Internet because you’re reading this (busted!).  And there are still three more days left of this Thanksgiving holiday.  Now what?

You participate in the National Day of Listening, that’s what!  The good folks of Story Corps (You know, the ones who set up those orange booths around the country and have pairs of people record interviews each other–with the results being archived in the National Archive and some being broadcast to tear-jerking effect on NPR) last year wisely established the day after Thanksgiving as the National Day of Listening

On the day after Thanksgiving, set aside one hour to record a conversation with someone important to you. You can interview anyone you choose: an older relative, a friend, a teacher, or someone from the neighborhood.

You can preserve the interview using recording equipment readily available in most homes, such as cell phones, tape recorders, computers, or even pen and paper. Our free Do-It-Yourself Instruction Guide is easy to use and will prepare you and your interview partner to record a memorable conversation, no matter which recording method you choose.

Make a yearly tradition of listening to and preserving a loved one’s story. The stories you collect will become treasured keepsakes that grow more valuable with each passing generation.

What a most excellent idea!  Particularly for verbally gifted kids.

I say so because as a child and teen I had–for some unknown reason–an unusual interest in genealogy.  I have no idea where it came from. No one else I knew shared my passion.  But there it was.  And I know that somewhere in my years of reading about giftedness, particularly verbal giftedness, I have come across references to an interest in genealogy being a gifted “thing.”  Maybe it was this mention on the Hoagies Gifted Official Homepage of the PG (Profoundly Gifted) Cult:  “Are you researching your family’s genealogy? Before you retire? Before you even have kids?”

Gulp.  Hand raised.  Um, that would have been me.  I was the one who when she was 14 and spending a summer with her grandparents in Switzerland quizzed them on our family’s history, poured over a box of old photographs and wrote down names, dates, and whatever details I could find.

Genealogy is a great hobby for gifted kids, as it blends history, research, interviewing and writing, all in an intensely personal way.  Because more than most, gifted kids are seeking answers to the big question of “Who am I and where do I belong in this vast arc of human experience?” (Yes, gifted kids really do think intensely about these things.)  Family history, the personal narrative, provides that.  Genealogy is also systematic.  There is a structure (begat, begat, begat). There is a concreteness and a progression that is almost like a game (can I get the birth certificate? Immigration record? A census record?  And if I get that information, then I can get…).   Finally, there are now so many amazing media tools with which to organize and present and share genealogy information in really creative ways (Hello PowerPoint, YouTube and podcasts!).

Now as a grown up person in her 40s, I am pleased to report that my early interest in family history has finally paid off.  A few other people in my family have finally caught up with me  and suddenly I have this treasure trove of info that otherwise would have been completely lost.  Nerd Girl has become Go To Girl.

One thing I did several years ago was put it all on Ancestry.com so that it could be easily shared.  Not to sound like a commercial or anything, but the site is rather cool, despite the fact that somehow they and the genealogy gods have locked up electronic access to many many records unless you’re willing to pay.  That part is not so great.  Nonetheless, I think the site would be a kick for a gifted kid to play around with.

So instead of driving each other crazy today, get started on your family history.  Your ancestors will thank you.

P.S.  If your family gathering was less than optimal, if the grandparents think you’re just a little bit crazy about “this gifted thing,” you may want to check out Jim Webb’s Grandparents’ Guide to Gifted Children.  And give it as a not-so-subtle holiday present.

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Seems that folks are not happy that the Takoma announcement concerning magnet field trips circulated beyond the Takoma magnet community.  Somehow I don’t have a lot of sympathy.  Parents talk.  Kids talk.  Everyone is connected to everyone these days.  Email gets forwarded.  People, it’s the 21st century.  Meanwhile, over at Eastern, where the announcement was posted, there was plenty of consternation about the message itself, prompting the principal to respond.

I was incredibly disapponted [sic] by the information presented in the posting from Takoma Park Middle School. The details of the posting regarding Eastern were not accurate. I am writing to clear up some of the confusion surrounding the state of the eighth grade humanities trip to NYC.

Eastern is committed to providing this opportunity to every humanities student that is currently enrolled at Eastern — those currently in grades 6, 7 and 8. We are very aware that this opportunity was a part of your decision making process as you selected Eastern as your middle school and are determined to honor that which was promised.

We are also aware that the state of the economy makes the expense of the trip very difficult for families and the school does not have the funds to support many scholarships. We will work with students at each grade level to earn funds to support the field trip through fundraising efforts. That being said — all students/parents are encouraged to start saving now so that you are prepared for the expense of this trip when your student moves into grade 8.

The ONLY reason that a significant modification to the trip would be discussed for current Eastern humanities students is if it becomes clear that a significant number of students can not afford the expense of the trip. Should we begin to get this feedback we will involve the students and parents in the decision making process about a change. I stress again that we are committed to making every effort to ensure that all current students have the opportunity to experience the NYC trip.

You may be wondering… what about students that are not yet at Eastern but may be considering Eastern’s humanities program? For our future students the state of the trip is uncertain. Not cancelling the trip but changing it. (emphasis added).  Alternative experiences such as a closer location may need to be invesigated [sic]. The uncertainty is driven by economics. We will work to maintain this trip beyond our current students but will be carefully considering the financial impact that this one experience may have on our families. Again, the final decisions will be made after careful consideration and in collaboration with students and parents.

So that’s the latest.  Changes afoot.

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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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Check it out.  The Post reported on Thursday that Virginia has approved another Governors School:

In the works for two years, the governor’s school received the go-ahead from the Virginia Board of Education last week and is expected to open in September 2010 to rising high school juniors in Prince William County, Manassas and Manassas Park. The rigorous school, which will be at George Mason University’s campus in Manassas and will eventually have about 150 students….

The governor’s school will offer a partial-day program, with students returning to their home school in the afternoon for English, government and elective classes, said Hubbard, one of the roughly 35 educators and parents who helped plan the school. The program will weave science, technology, engineering and math concepts together with the core curriculum focused on environmental issues.

And Maryland?  Nada.  We have nothing like this, on a multi-county level.  Why? I guess the assumption is that our schools are so fabulous that our gifted students are well served.  If anything, Montgomery County is going in the opposite direction, not “marketing” certain programs as targeted to the creme de la creme, and rather “spreading the wealth.”  That strategy, a la Malcolm Gladwell makes a certain amount of sense (Harvard is only going to accept X number of students from a single school).  But it doesn’t really serve exceptional students who would benefit from a concentrated grouping of peers and resources.

MCPS offers some opportunities for early college, mostly through Montgomery College, our local community college.  But they are largely targeted to at-risk kids and vocational training.  The Early College Scholars Program at Northwood High School has a relationship with University of Maryland, but states

It is NOT designed to shorten the time a student spends in college, but rather to provide a support for the student as they learn to navigate the demands of being successful in college.

All strictly lay out GPA requirements and the requirement of junior and senior status.  And in all these cases, parents pay:  $387.60 for each 3 credit hour semester class, plus books.  In contrast, look at Minnesota’s Post-Secondary Enrollment Options (PSEO).

The PSEO program covers all course tuition and fees and text books. It also covers consumable supplies that are required specifically for a class, such as art supplies, film, etc.

Notice who is eligible.  “The Minnesota Legislature established the PSEO program in 1985 to give students an opportunity to enhance the education that they receive at their local high schools, alternative area learning centers, charter schools or home schools. (emphasis added.)

The University of Maryland has provisions for dual or concurrent enrollment–even for homeschoolers–but man, is it complicated.  And there is that persistent obstacle to acceleration and early college for students who don’t homeschool, namely the four years of English requirement.  If you can’t accelerate a year somewhere along the way, you’re screwed.  It doesn’t seem to matter how advanced your English classes are, four years are four years.  Meanwhile, math acceleration in MCPS grows willy-nilly and increasingly we will have kids who “run out” of math at their high schools.  But provide a path for kids who are verbally gifted? Fuggedaboutit.

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Remember how a few months ago I wrote about the fight in Pennsylvania to save their Governor’s School of Excellence for the Arts, a summer program for gifted students?  How actor Kevin Bacon had even weighed in?  Well the same thing is happening here in Maryland (minus the high profile celebrity speaking out.)  As a GT advocate explained in a recent call to action

The Maryland Summer Centers will cease operation after summer 2009, as there was no funding for the Summer Centers included in Governor O’Malley’s 2010 budget. Please take a moment to email the Governor to ask that he provide funding for the Centers to operate in 2010 and future years. You may not be helping your own child, but you will be helping the hundreds of children who do participate in the Summer Center program. For many gifted and talented children, the Summer Centers are the only opportunity they have to receive the kind of appropriate instruction that will enable them to reach their fullest potential. The Summer Centers may also be their only opportunity to be with other children who share their abilities and interests.

This morning the Post came out with an editorial in favor of funding the Maryland Summer Centers.  At first reading I was excited.  The Post actually was speaking out in support of gifted students!  In the thousands of column inches written on education, how often do gifted students ever warrant a mention, let alone an editorial?

But on second reading, I felt deflated.  It was … the tone.  Starting with the opening paragraph. So weak.

IT’S HARD TO argue that Maryland’s summer centers for the gifted and talented are essential. After all, those selected for the program are high achievers, and would remain high achievers even without this opportunity. Nonetheless, it is regrettable that the only statewide program targeting this unique population is on the chopping block.

“Would remain high achievers even without this opportunity.  Nonetheless…”  Really?  Can the Post really say?  My kids have never attended one of these programs, but I have heard countless testimonies from kids and adults who have attended similar programs, such as CTY, who say that these opportunities made an ENORMOUS difference in their achievement, in their social and emotional well-being, in their lives.  So gee, thanks Post editorial board for that less than supportive statement. “It’s hard to argue…”  Hell yes, it’s hard to argue when the ostensible thought leaders in our country somehow think that gifted kids don’t need any support, will do just fine, thank you very much.

The Post goes on

Without question, the state is right to place a priority on the needs of struggling students; resources should go to help the children furthest behind.

Um, I think a lot of things are worth questioning.  Let’s have that discussion.  We may, at the end of the day, come to the same decisions as to where resources should go, but to blithely say that current resource allocations shouldn’t be questioned?

The Post does concede that “there is evidence (and Maryland is not alone) that gifted students don’t get the attention that would enable them to really thrive,” but you get the sense that the only reason they’ve come out in support is that the amount needed to fund the program is such a pittance.  Were more resources involved I’d be less confident that they’d be worrying about the state’s need “to serve all its students, no matter where they fall on the continuum.”

What is so discouraging about this whole situation is the drip drip drip of it.  It’s like death by a thousand paper cuts for gifted kids.  The cutting of a summer program here.  The cutting of electives there.  The elimination of GT classes in middle school.  The lack of differentiation and a curriculum that meets the needs of gifted kids. The drive to do away with gifted identification–to erase the very term “gifted and talented’ from the policies meant to guide gifted education in favor of pie in the sky declarations encompassing the achievement of “all students.”  Et cetera, et cetea, et cetera.

Where does it all lead?  Parents doing anything they can to find alternatives.

****

Read A Summer Vacation Of Intensive Learning:  Supporters Try to Save Centers Program

If you haven’t yet written to the Governor to ask him to fund this program, please consider doing so while there’s still time for the 2010 RFP process to start in late August.

Online: http://www.governor.maryland.gov/mail/

(Please use the Correspondence Topic “Education Issues” and a Subject of “Maryland Summer Centers”.)

or by U.S. Post:

Governor O’Malley
100 State Circle
Annapolis, MD
21401-1925

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Seems like two of the actors in this spring’s Eastern Middle School magnet controversy are–or may soon be–movin’ on up.  Not to the East Side, but rather west.  From the North Lake Tahoe Bonanza (now there’s a name for a paper!) comes this:

The six candidates for Washoe County School District superintendent were in Reno Monday and Tuesday, interviewing with the board and meeting the public.

The male candidates were selected Friday from a pool of about 20 applicants.

They are Robert Alfaro, 58, of Las Vegas; Karst Brandsma, 55, of Everett, Wash.; Dennis Dearden, 57, of Tucson, Ariz.; Gary Larsen of Nampa, Idaho; Pedro Martinez of Chicago and Heath Morrison, 42, of Germantown, Md….

Morrison is a community superintendent for Montgomery County Public Schools in Maryland.

“Myself, my principals and my teachers see those challenges not as barriers but as opportunities,” Morrison said. “We see them as opportunities to meet kids where they are and take them where they need to be, and where they need to be is high school graduation, college readiness and work readiness.”

(Spreading the Seven Keys luv!)

Meanwhile Eastern’s principal, who came under heavy criticism from parents for her handling of the decision to change Eastern’s schedule (start here and work your way back in the archives), is also leaving, for the leafy outer regions of MoCo.

EASTERN MIDDLE SCHOOL
Message sent – 6/10/2009
new principal

Good evening, this is Mrs. Boucher, principal of Eastern Middle School, with a personal note. Este mensaje sera repetido en espanol. Yesterday, June 9, the Board of Education appointed me the new principal of John Poole Middle School in Poolesville. After 6 wonderful years at Eastern, I can’t help but feel sad to leave this school and community that means so much to me. John Poole is an exciting assignment for me, however, since it is my neighborhood school. This new job is a homecoming of sorts, allowing me to serve my neighbors and family members. In fact, I will be the third generation of my family to be MCPS educators in the Poolesville schools. I want to thank you for making my 6 years at Eastern so rich. It has been a great joy to work with your wonderful children. Now the next step is to hire a new principal, and MCPS is racing to get a new leader in place by July 1. There will be a meeting tomorrow evening, Thursday, June 11, at 7:00 PM in the media center at which community members will be able to give Dr. Morrison their ideas about the new principal. Dr. Morrison will also come to Eastern at 9:00 Friday morning, June 12, to collect parent input. Please make every effort to attend one of these meetings so your voice can be heard. I sent home a letter with your child today with this information. Please ask for it if you have not seen the letter already, or check our website where it is posted. Thanks – for everything – and have a pleasant evening..

I can’t help but think that both these changes (and potential changes) are a good thing.  Eastern in particular has been ripe for new leadership.   Should be interesting to see who the replacement is.

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I suppose I should be shocked speechless, but after several years of paying particular attention to gifted education in MCPS, not much shocks me anymore.  Still, to have it all laid out so clearly and succinctly by a new-to-the-beat writer on a nationally read education blog was, well, startling.

I speak of back-to-back posts today by Mary Ann Zehr over on Curriculum Matters, one of EducationWeek.org’ s blogs.  Zehr recently attended a seminar on “detracking” and wrote about it in her post, The Problem of Tracking in Middle Schools.  When a panel was asked how to end tracking (“apartheid”)

Kati Haycock, the president of the Education Trust, replied that combating tracking, where students are placed in classes according to their level of academic performance, “is about calling it malpractice and acting on it.”

Deep breath.  We’ve all heard this before from MCEF.

Zehr then shares the anecdote of another panelist, an MCPS middle school assistant principal.

…her school made a move to reduce tracking in English-language arts classes. The school decided to do away with a remedial class in English-language arts for the lowest performing students, and mix the students from that class in with students from two other classes of gifted and talented students. So the school blended the lowest-performing and highest-performing students in classes to learn English-language arts together. She said that each class was then taught by a team of two teachers. In one of the classes, one of the teachers who was part of the team was a special education teacher. Kopnitsky said that test scores show that the change benefited the students who had been in the remedial class.

Left unasked, of course, is the $60,000 question:  What of the impact on the high performing students? (For the moment we’ll table the question of how many MCPS middle schools allocate *two* teachers per class to ensure differentiation.)

Zehr quickly realized this, and followed up with another post two hours later:  Tracking Is a Hot-Button Issue—Follow-Up to Recent Post

I just called Stacey A. Kopnitsky, the assistant principal at Cabin John Middle School, to ask her what happened to the performance of the gifted and talented students at her school after they were mixed in English-language arts classes with the low-performing students.She says that those students scored “advanced,” the highest of three levels, on the Maryland state English-language-arts test both before and after the change in policy. “They were maintaining and doing as well as before,” she said.

But she also acknowledged that the teachers and administrators in the school didn’t look at the test-score data in any more detail than to make sure that the top-performing students were staying within the advanced level. She said they were more focused on the progress of the students with basic skills.

Okay, so those advanced students were… “maintaining.”  Yeah, read that again.  “They were maintaining and doing as well as before.” On the grade-level MSA.  And that second paragraph…read that one again.  No, read it three times–especially the last sentence:   “She said they were more focused on the progress of the students with basic skills.”

See?  I haven’t been making this stuff up.  And the kicker?

Kopnitsky added that no parents have complained about the policy change.

Did the parents even have a clue??

Welcome to the neighborhood, Mary Ann.

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