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Posts Tagged ‘parent advocacy’

Yes, I’m a glutton for punishment.  I showed up at last night’s Wednesday’s second Board of Education hearing on the FY 2011 operating budget and the proposed cuts too.  The clusters on deck to testify on Wednesday were Whitman, Bethesda Chevy-Chase, Northwood, Kennedy, Einstein, Blair, Wooton, Rockville, Richard Montgomery and Churchill.  You can see the full BOE agenda here.  You can now watch it here.

Meanwhile the transcripts of the actual cluster testimonies for both the January 13 and January 20 hearings have now been posted to the MCCPTA website, and can be downloaded here.

Like the previous week, there was a strong turn out, however this time it was purple-wearing members of the SIEU that initially packed the room.  Among others, they represent MCPS media center assistants, which are among the positions slated to be cut.  Also in the house:  boy scouts.  They were there for their civics badge, which requires attending a public meeting with two opposing sides.   And lots of students from the middle school magnet consortium and the Richard Montgomery IB magnet.  Groups rotated in an out of the room throughout the evening.

I’m not going to give you a blow by blow of the evening–after all it was three and a half hours long, finishing at 10:30.  But I will give what I thought were the highlights.

The Middle School Magnet Consortium rocked it:

Where was CAP?  Where was Eastern’s Humanities Magnet?  Nowhere.  Guys, you HAVE to do better.  Check out the webpage on student advocacy that has been put up on the Loiederman school website.  The MSMC students and parents were out in force. They had several students testify eloquently to the importance of the magnet, with one student saying words to the effect, “I was not surprised the cuts targeted gifted students, they have been under attack for some time.”  They had an alumna who is now “working in her dream job” and who said “We are not a system of a privileged few?  Why would we take a step back [and cut magnet transportion]?”  The Parkland Science magnet kids had a video.  A group of magnet Girl Scouts sang a song and rendered Vice Chairman Charles Barclay momentarily speechless.  And MSMC parent Stephanie Weishaar, gave outstanding testimony in support of the instructional needs of gifted kids–I would love to get a copy.

The Whitman cluster rep’s “don’t hate me because I’m beautiful” comment (.pdf of full text here):

“Sometimes parents in our Cluster have been unfairly stereotyped, mischaracterized, and even faulted for their deep and vocal concern about their children’s education. Those same parents, however, have made huge commitments to help fill needs the schools’ budgets have not been able to satisfy. These parents demonstrate their care and commitment in productive ways every day by volunteering thousands of hours in classrooms, at recess and in evening community events to support our schools.”

They picked up kudos from a board member for sending a letter with over 500 signatures to the state level on the maintenance of effort issue (something I’m not even going to pretend I understand.)  Their priority:  classroom size.  No mention at all was made of academic supports (no one needs supporting?) or magnet and special program transportation (no one leaves the cluster so who cares?)

Northwood Cluster rep’s testimony (see full text here):

For the last three years, the Northwood cluster has fought to maintain AI (academic intervention), special program and focus teachers from being cut. Why are these positions consistently put on the chopping block by Superintendent Weast? How do schools in the cluster reach higher AYP goals with fewer tools? By recommending these potential cuts in intervention, is Dr. Weast setting up schools in the DCC for failure? Once again, the Northwood Cluster’s highest priority is to maintain the current levels of AI , Special Program, and Focus teachers in each school in order to maintain AYP (Annual Yearly Progress), continue to close the achievement gap, increase eligibility rates, and achieve the MCPS Seven Keys to College Readiness. The cluster asks the BOE to stop the assault on direct instruction to students and find other ways to reduce costs that don’t directly impact our children, for example, reducing publication costs, reducing the number of community superintendents, freezing the curriculum department, and consolidating MCPS to make it a more efficient institution. Northwood Cluster constituents remark that during hard economic times, institutions, including MCPS, need to employ a third party to step back, look in the mirror, exam their current practices and productivity, and decide how to become an efficient well-oiled machine. Thank you for listening and your consideration.

“Stop the assault to direct instruction to students….for example reducing the number of community superintendents….” Yowza!  Speak truth to power!

Blair Cluster Rep testimony (full text here):  The Blair cluster spoke out forcefully for GT programming:

Excellence is important to us. Our cluster of 13 schools has Spanish, French, and IB programs, magnet math and science instruction in 4 schools, two highly gifted centers for local students, and other local special programs. Application programs have provided an essential lifeline to parents whose child’s academic discipline and/or talent would not otherwise be developed and are an attractive alternative to parents who may otherwise choose private school. In the past couple of years, MCPS’ Accelerated and Enriched Instruction staff have worked diligently to raise the bar for everyone by training dozens of teachers and providing opportunities for hundreds of on-grade students to study more advanced material. Thank you for this work.

And pointed to where cuts need to be made:

Simply put, we ask that you prioritize People over PCs, Teachers over Technology, and Students over Statistics in any future budget cuts. Be diligent in dissecting the 2.044 trillion dollar operating budget, and consider budget reductions in these other areas with concentrated expenses in IT, human resources, and the Superintendent’s offices…

I loved some of these cluster comments. They showed that at least some in the county have not been fooled by Jerry Weast’s cynical tactics, namely instructing principals to urge parents to support his budget or else X, Y and Z cuts impacting students will be made.  And then they all dutifully converge on the county council and push for Weast’s budget to be passed, intact.  Thankfully some parents are saying, “Wait a minute.”  Let’s talk about cuts to the bloated, non-instructional part of the budget.  Let’s talk about accountability, about oversight, about waste, and yes, perhaps even fraud.  Let’s not just blindly endorse whatever is put forward but instead–to use a favorite Weast phrase–put these things on the table.

Eric Marx, on behalf of the gifted magnets.  Speaking on his own behalf, he let it rip for gifted education (I’ll post a full text when it becomes available):

I speak tonight in support of saving those magnet programs from the threatened cuts to next year’s budget.  And make no mistake about it, even though the threatened cuts would save only a tiny amount of money, they would be devastating to these programs.  They would not merely limit access to the magnet programs to those families who have the resources and ability to provide their own transportation, although it’s hard to see how even those families would somehow be able to transport multiple students to different schools at the same time.  These cuts would not merely exacerbate the racial, economic, and geographic disproportionality of the students who are able to participate in the programs.  Instead, these cuts will absolutely kill these programs as we know them, and would violate the guarantee of Policy IOA that Centers and Magnet programs will continue to be provided to students who require such “markedly different programming.”

Now, the magnets are certainly not perfect – there’s too much homework, and many of the programs are too limited in their curricular offerings — but for highly and profoundly gifted students in MCPS, they are simply all there is.  As a parent and GT activist I have seen first-hand the life-saving and life-changing necessity of these programs for the students who, because of their unique academic and social needs, have no other educational options within MCPS, no other alternative to being ignored and warehoused in local schools with few or no appropriate instructional opportunities.

Indeed, for years, parents of highly and profoundly gifted students have had little or no reason other than the hope offered by the magnets to stay in MCPS schools.  MCPS’ lack of real advanced curricular offerings and appropriate grouping practices offer little adequate instruction for gifted students in local schools.  Quite frankly, without the magnets, parents of these children will, and should, leave MCPS as soon as they are able to, because MCPS is making it clearer every day that they just don’t want to educate gifted children.  Indeed, that is the completely unacceptable message sent by even the threats of these cuts — MCPS is again saying that everything else is more important than GT education, and that every other thing in the budget has to be fully funded before gifted and talented students get anything, again highlighting just how low a priority for MCPS is the real academic needs of GT students….

Finally, testimony by MPAC parents to an empty chair. I should have taken a picture.  Late in the evening, when the crowd had thinned out considerably, supporters of the MPAC program took to the mike.  At one point a parent, reading from a prepared text, directly pleaded to Jerry Weast to save this program for severely developmentally delayed preschoolers from cuts.  But the chair was empty.  Dr. Weast had left the building.  No doubt on his way to Kentucky, where he had an engagement to speak on “his comprehensive reform effort… that includes an investment in preschool education for both public and private providers.”

Ouch.

[Were you there or did you watch online?  Did you have a favorite moment?  A link to what you thought was compelling testimony?  Add it to the comments.]

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Thanks to the Parents’ Coalition, a January 8, 2010 memorandum from Superintendent Weast to the Board of Education has come to light.  In the memo, Weast answers some questions from unidentified Board members about his proposed FY 2011 Budget cuts.

I’ll leave aside the point well made by the Parents Coalition,

Pants, gifted education...not the same thing.

that the cuts to academic intervention teachers and paraeducators are not justified one way or another based on any studies or data.  I’ll even leave aside the non-answer to the question: “Please break down how the special program teachers will be reduced by school and program. Describe the specific impact of these cuts on each special program and school.

No, I’m going to focus on Question 7 (page 4), which asks about the impact on “each optional regular education program and impacted school proposed for the elimination of transportation.”  The answer, in a nutshell, is that transportation costs $942 per student, and yes, fewer students would attend if transport were cut but they would still have the “opportunity” to attend.  They would just have to get themselves there.  Oh, and yes, cutting consortia transport was considered, “but the consortia are not optional programs.  The school the student selects is the assigned school and transportation must be provided.” [emphasis added]

Pardon me if I am slackjawed. Consortia programs absolutely are optional.  As a commenter posted a few days ago, what really is the difference between Entrepreneurship & Business Management (Blair) and Finance, Business Management, and Marketing (Einstein)?  And no matter what, students can always opt for their base schools–they’re assured a place there.  They call it the Division of Consortia Choice and Application Program Services for a reason.

So can we get something straight right now?  Magnets and Center Programs and yes, I’ll got out on a limb and say that even the RM IB, are not “optional.”  They are part of the much vaunted MCPS “continuum of gifted services.”  They are for “students whose needs cannot be met at the home school.”  They are not some frill, some “extra,” some “goodie.”  Here’s what Policy IOA says:

Children with special abilities and talents are part of the human mosaic in our schools and communities. They typically learn at a pace and depth that set them apart from the majority of their same-age peers. Because they have the potential to perform at high levels of accomplishment and have unique affective and learning style needs when compared with others of their age, they require instructional and curricular adjustments that can create a better match between their identified needs and the educational services they typically receive. [emphasis added] (Section B)

For students who require a markedly different programming, centers for highly
gifted and other special programs including magnet programs will continue to be provided, and new programs will be developed as needed. (Section C 3 c)

Finally there is this:

The superintendent shall direct implementation of this policy and specifically shall ensure that every school has a program that meets its requirements. Among the specific actions the superintendent will take are the following:

8. Prepare budget requests that provide adequate resources to implement the policy

Of course there is lots in Policy IOA that has never been carried out–that’s why they wanted to scrap it.  However the fact remains:  You take away transportation and you effectively kill the magnets, centers and immersion programs.

Don’t let it happen.  Sign the petitions here and here. (Who knows if they’ll have any impact.  At minimum the comments are inspiring.).  And be sure to come to the Board of Education hearing on Wednesday night, 7 p.m.

Here’s a notice that’s been floating around some school listservs…  Please repost.

TOMORROW: WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20th at 7pm

BOE Meeting on Proposed MCPS Operating Budget

Carver Educational Services Center
850 Hungerford Drive
Rockville, MD 20850

Testimony will include Blair PTSA co-chair and others within our cluster. We need your presence. Students are especially encouraged to attend. This is Civics in action!

Wear yellow to protest cuts in transportation for special programs. Wear red to support Blair. Wear both if you can!

Whether you can make it to the meeting or not, please write to the Board to let them know that these cuts are unacceptable and damaging to the integrity of appropriate academic opportunity for all students. Then continue to write to the County Council and your representatives in Annapolis.

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The Christmas/holiday/blizzard stupor is slowly lifting and as the New Year approaches, parents are beginning to focus on the resumption of school and with it, school issues.  Foremost, the Superintendent’s Recommended FY 2011 Operating Budget.   You’ll recall that the good Dr. Weast presented the behemoth $2.2 Billion (yes, that’s billion) budget in early December.  This budget includes no new initiatives or programs, but seeks an additional $106 million for expected increases in operational costs, including:

  • $15.8 million for increased enrollment and new school expenditures
  • $25.9 million for continuing salary costs and benefits for current employees
  • $33.1 million for increases in health insurance, life insurance, social security and other costs for current and retired employees
  • $30.9 million for Other Post Employee Benefits (OPEB), which safeguards insurance benefits for future retirees.

And if not approved?  Be prepared for cuts … oh and he’s provided a helpful list of cuts to programs and services most guaranteed to outrage reliably vocal parents.  Now I confess, I am not a numbers/budget girl.  Just ask Husband Dear.  So this budget stuff all sort of washed over me.  But I’m slowly getting it. And what I’m getting is that Jerry Weast is, once again, playing a cynical, cynical game.  His message to parents:   “Support our budget or something bad will happen to your magnets, your consortium and signature programs.”  And on cue, he dutifully expects us rise to his defense.  Shameless, really, when you take a look the Parents Coalition blog, where the question is rightfully being asked, “Where has all the money gone?

So let me offer a new suggestion as to what might go onto the chopping block:  The Equity Team.  You might remember them from a previous post.

The Equity Training and Development Team (ETDT) in the Office of Organizational Development continues to focus on-1) building leadership staff capacity to lead for equity, 2) deepening capacity of OOD staff to explicitly infuse equity content and processes into all professional development programs and projects, and 3) providing direct services, consultation, and resources to support school-based and central services study and dialogue about the impact of race and ethnicity on teaching and learning. Schools receiving equity training must commit to at least a year-long program that is aligned to an equity goal in the School Improvement plan. Requests from schools for this long-term support has risen from five in FY 2005 to 66 in 2009 . In addition to working directly with several dozen schools, members of the Equity Training and Development Team also supported leadership teams in several central offices, including the Office of Special Education and Student Services and the Title I Office. Members of the team also supported a number of system project teams, including the Disproportionality Workgroup, the Equity and Excellence Process Team, and several M-Stat teams.

I don’t know exactly how much savings would result from its elimination (you can check the budget numbers for the Office of Organizational Development, of which it is a part, in Chapter 6 of the budget. (pdf)), but I nominate The Equity Team on the basis of the costs it has incurred in the past, namely the speaker fees for Glenn Singleton, the purchase of (I’m guessing) thousands of copies of Courageous Conversations About Race: A Field Guide for Achieving Equity in Schools (at $30/copy), MCPS staff participation in conferences with sessions with such titles as Rigor or Rigor Mortis: Reframing the White Construct of “Rigor” to Give All Students Access to Challenging Material that Embraces Multiple Perspectives and Experiences.

Enough with the hundreds of staff hours sucked up by book clubs and Critical Race Theory indoctrination of teachers. In tough budget times–with threatened cuts to student services–we don’t have the luxury of this kind of discredited ideological foolishness.

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The MCCPTA just sent around the link to this YouTube video of Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley extolling the importance of arts education.

Meanwhile, those stalwart parents at Eastern Middle School have just notified parents of the status of their appeal to the MCPS Board of Education to reverse a schedule change that precludes students in the Humanities and Communication Arts Program from taking an arts elective. (For a refresher on the case, check here here here here here here here and here. Whew!)

We have two items to report and a decision to make.

The first item is that while the MCPS Board of Education (BOE) was
developing its detailed response (“Decision and Order”) on why they denied our appeal of the class reduction (schedule) decision, and before school started, we submitted a last ditch request for a stay of the decision to the Maryland State Board of Education (MSBE). MSBE denied the stay with a lengthy response from a law firm that nevertheless helps lay out how an appeal to MSBE could be framed if someone were to submit one.

The second item is that the Workgroup received its detailed response from the MCPS BOE. While five members of the BOE supported denial of our appeal, two others — Phil Kauffman and Laura Berthiaume — provided very detailed dissenting opinions (16 pages!) that bring up additional reasons beyond what we said as to why the decision and process were wrong. Various reports have described literal
shouting matches among Board members about this! These two Board members should be congratulated for their courage in standing up for what they believe and for the tremendous amount of time and effort they obviously put into defending our position. Please take a minute to thank them by contacting them directly.

Please also take some time to read these opinions. [Note:  link to document not available at this time.] While the Workgroup “has articulated a number of well-reasoned arguments in support of their position,” as Mr. Kauffman states, these dissenting opinions are truly amazing and go far beyond what our little group developed. Some of these arguments, including the violation of state regulations for some students regarding the need for a fine arts option, were not addressed by the majority opinion. [Emphasis added]

The decision that needs to be made is how to proceed from here. The two
board members’ opinions, plus the framework inherent within the opinion of MSBE noted above, have paved the way for a formal MSBE appeal. *But this appeal must be filed by November 13*….

–The EMS Schedule Decision Reversal Workgroup

Big, Big Kudos to BOE members Berthiaume and Phil Kaufman for listening to and valuing student input, for having the courage to offer dissenting opinions.  And good luck to the Workgroup as they decide their next steps.

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Been busy with some In Real Life GT issues lately and yesterday evening I found myself once more combing through down county school websites.  Out of close to 40 schools, I think maybe four had GT liaisons listed on their PTA websites.  Even more discouraging was to find that some schools don’t even have a PTA website…or even a page on the school’s website that lists some officers and committees or basic parent information.

But in my Web-surfing I did have the chance to stop at the site of Silver Chips, the award-winning online newspaper of Richard Mongomery Blair High School.  There, I read a great feature story about Maneesh Agrawala, a recent MacArthur Fellow “genius award” recipient–and Blair Math Science Magnet alum.

Although Agrawala was shocked to be receiving the MacArthur grant, his entire life has been committed to the creativity and knowledge the MacArthur Fellows Program looks for. Ever since he was young, Agrawala was interested in math and computer science. Agrawala recalls that seeing his father teach computer science at the University of Maryland influenced his interest in the field.

Agrawala took his love of these subjects to Takoma Park Middle School’s Math and Science Magnet Program, where he excelled in math….

From 1986 – 1990, Agrawala continued these pursuits, enrolling in Blair’s Magnet Program and furthering his interests in computer science and math. “The Magnet was really great,” Agrawala says. “The Magnet was able to put me on my set path and helped me understand concepts.”

Agrawala’s residency in the Magnet was quite notable. He was a finalist in the Intel Science Talent Search competition and had an interest in writing.

However, his biggest impact on Blair came in 1988. Along with Sven Khatri, Dan Mall and Howard Gobioff, all in Blair’s class of 1990, he took part in the first national “SuperQuest – The High School Supercomputing Challenge,” according to notes from the Board of Education. The team won second place out of 1,480 high schools nationwide, winning Blair a Cyber 910 workstation. What’s more, Blair received its first-ever direct connection to the Internet, making it the first school in Montgomery County to have Internet access, according to the Magnet Foundation. The connection even initiated the mbhs.edu domain that Blair still uses.

Ah, those magnets.  You know, those “boutique programs” that MCPS Superintendent Jerry Weast was talking about back in April.  Wisely, believing that the strong defense is an offense, some magnet parents offered passionate testimony in support of the math science magnets at recent Board of Education-sponsored Community Forums [sic].  You can read their testimony here, on pages 5, 11, 12, 14 and 17.

Maybe their cause will be bolstered with a local screening of the documentary Whiz Kids at the National Academy of Sciences in December.

WHIZ KIDS is a coming-of-age documentary that marks the distinct paths of three remarkably passionate 16-year-old scientists who vie to compete—win or lose—in the Intel Science Talent Search, a program of Society for Science & the Public (and formerly known as the Westinghouse Science Talent Search)….   For a year and a half, they visited high schools around the country searching for teenagers who were engaged in sophisticated research.  The team found students, who at 16 and 17, were already working in university and government labs, sometimes alongside Nobel Prize-winning scientists.  They also found students with fewer resources who were making discoveries in the apocryphal basement or garage lab.  Several traits were consistent among these “whiz kids” — an insatiable curiosity, a deeply felt determination to communicate their work to the public, and a passion to make a difference in the world.

You can see a trailer of the film on the film’s website, www.whizkidsmovie.com, as well as get information on the issue of fostering excellence in science.  Which can start right here in Montgomery County.

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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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Well I just forked over my $2.95 per article to Education Week in order to read Laura Vanderkam’s article, Whatever Happened to Grade Skipping (Aug. 12)–and a response by Kay Williams, MCPS’s Director of the Division of Accelerated and Enriched Instruction, District Cited Does Does Have Options for ‘Acceleration‘ (Sept. 15).  Laura writes about both in her blog post today, “Without Skipping a Grade.” I had to see what all the fuss was about.

In EdWeek Ms. Vanderkam wrote:

Even in the best of times, gifted education is controversial. Why your child and not my child? When the economy and school budgets get tight, the gifted conversation only heats up more, with parents anxious to hang on to any advantage their child might garner, and budget hawks eager to ax programs some see as expendable.

That phenomenon is playing out across the country….  In Montgomery County, Md., the debate is more existential, with the district considering abandoning its practice of labeling 2nd graders as gifted or not gifted.

That was enough to set alarms ringing over at MCPS’s $10 million PR office  and trigger a response.

In her letter to Education Week, Ms. Williams argues that contrary to the impression created, “acceleration is already an integral part of the program options in Montgomery County public schools. The district’s systemwide model for acceleration ensures that students can access an appropriate, above grade-level curriculum every day without skipping a grade.”

Ms. Vanderkam (in addition to calling out the reliance on math as an example) rightly picks up on the unstated implication that there is something bad about a whole grade skip.  She concludes

If Montgomery County has a systemwide model in order to ensure that no one need (horrors!) skip a grade, this seems to show that the prejudice is alive and well.

Oh my, is it ever.  One needs look no further than the recent Singam case.  Or just read my post on this subject earlier in the week.  Or what happened with my other daughter when subject acceleration was suggested (Update: At her new (not MCPS) school my seventh grader is going to be reading, discussing and writing about Lord of the Flies–with the high school kids.)

MCPS’s attitude is all the more shocking when one considers that the people in charge of gifted education are philosophically (financially?  bureaucratically?) opposed to a legitimate gifted education intervention that is supported by research and allowed by law.  In fact Mr. Singam has been moved put together a little PowerPoint on the subject.

That’s where Ms. Vanderkam leaves off.  But for MoCo gifted advocates, the real interesting stuff  is the inside baseball examples Ms. Williams uses to make her case.

  • Math curriculum (always with the math!).  She notes that 48.8 percent of 5th grade students’ successfully completed grade 6 mathematics or higher in 2008-09, and similarly, 59.6 percent of 8th grade students successfully completed Algebra 1 or higher in 2008.  “Successfully completed?” “Proficiency” is 60% on county tests.
  • She notes that Montgomery County buses students whose needs cannot be met at the local elementary school to a nearby middle school, or to a center for the highly gifted.  Personally, in my 10 years with a student in the system I have never met a kid who has bussed to middle school or high school. But all the apocryphal stories I’ve heard involve….Surprise!…math.  As for the Centers, they are just for 4th and 5th grade, something people outside of Montgomery County wouldn’t know, but it sure sounds good.  Ms. Williams makes NO mention of kids in middle school who need coursework at the high school level being bused to high school, and of course no mention of significant acceleration opportunities in language arts, science or social studies.  A little William and Mary, a little Jr. Great Books, take some Mad Science after school, go the Smithsonian on the weekend.  We’ve been over all this before.
  • She states that MCPS provides “a continuum of services that includes offering the most challenging instruction in a setting that supports the social and emotional requirements of gifted learners helps the district meet all children’s needs.”  Please.  Don’t talk to me about “continuum of services.”  Or about sensitivity to the social and emotional needs of gifted kids.  If true, this blog and the GT listservs wouldn’t exist.
  • She states that more students are reading earlier (although the gains slip), more are taking rigorous and challenging courses (open to question…more taking doesn’t mean the courses are truly rigorous), and more are taking APs .

And that last bullet point? That‘s the issue.  MPCS wants to make this about “more students.”  But it’s not about the “more.”   It’s about being open to the possibility–the very likely possibility given the demographics of the county–of the existence of truly exceptional students, “the few,” (dare I say a Special Population) who need “services” beyond the limited options in circumscribed age-based boxes that MCPS offers.  It’s about having the flexibility, insight and humanity to recognize and meet the needs of these students.  To acknowledge and allow that for some students, whole grade acceleration aka “skipping” is the appropriate “service.”

However judging by MCPS actions and rhetoric, it doesn’t want to see these students (hence elimination of the term “gifted” in the proposed revision of Policy IOA).  And it doesn’t seem to want to serve them.  Newsflash:  If the majority of students is doing “advanced” level work, maybe we need to recalibrate what “grade level” is here in Montgomery County and restore some sanity to the whole “gifted” discussion.

Update 9/21/09:  Here’s part of the comment I posted over on Laura’s blog:

On the one hand MCPS can be commended for having the gifted services that it does. But when those “services” become a straight jacket that deny acceleration as a viable educational option for some children, and holds them back, it’s a problem. When gifted services morph into a belief that “everyone is gifted” then we have problem. Yes, raise the bar. But don’t in the process ignore the legitimate needs, the very existence of, gifted students.

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