Category: Voices of the Dropout Nation


Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type bool in /home/dropoutn/public_html/wp-content/themes/ralphkrause/ralphkrause/parts/mjr.php on line 47

Voices of the Dropout Nation: Steve Peha on Integration and Systemic Reform


Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type bool in /home/dropoutn/public_html/wp-content/themes/ralphkrause/ralphkrause/parts/mjr.php on line 47

Yesterday’s Dropout Nation commentary on desegregation and school reform elicited some interesting responses. Today, we publish one from Steve Peha, who contributed last week’s piece on the reading wars and…

Photo courtesy of CNN

Yesterday’s Dropout Nation commentary on desegregation and school reform elicited some interesting responses. Today, we publish one from Steve Peha, who contributed last week’s piece on the reading wars and the dropout crisis. While one may not fully agree with his positions (this editor is still uncomfortable about abandoning integration; I also disagree that standardized testing is the cause of the achievement gap — it merely shows what is happening to children in classrooms throughout the country), but Peha’s thoughts are worth your attention and consideration.

Great piece today, RiShawn, on a very dicey issue. Here are my thoughts.

You are correct, it seems to me, in urging our nation to privilege education over integration. It is regrettable, however, that we should have to make this choice but I think we do. Imagining, as I once did, that Brown ushered in the beginnings of a color-blind education system ignores important realities about color-blindness, education, and systems. We may have had our eyes on the prize when it came to civil rights, but I think we took our eye off the ball when it came to making sure that the franchise of learning was extended to all. This miscalculation, understandable and forgivable, must be addressed directly, even if it opens up old wounds and precipitates new conflicts.

The Brown decision now seems tragically paradoxical to me. The key finding, that segregated schools are inherently unequal, a notion I had long considered unassailably correct and therefore unworthy of closer examination, turns out to be much more complicated than I would have ever imagined.

Recently, I have been reading Stuart Buck’s new book, “Acting White: The Ironic Legacy of Desegregation.” He has, what I believe to be, a unique and compelling thesis that at least partially explains why we are where we are today with regard to the issue of integration and educational equity. His thesis is both simple and startling: forced desegregation dismantled a thriving—if under-resourced—black education system and replaced it with a white education system that was hostile to black children and unresponsive to their needs.

As districts began to desegregate in the 1960s, they chose, of course, to shutter black schools. In order to integrate white schools, black children had to be parceled out often among many different schools to reach federally mandated integration targets. This meant that kids who had gone to school together all their lives suddenly lost their friends and teachers, and wound up as small minorities in schools where they were not welcome.

Blacks also lost the schools that were the centerpieces of their communities, particular the many great black high schools in the South. Along with this, the percentage of black educators in some communities dropped from near 50 percent to as low as 10 percent, thus depriving black children and their families of educational role models and academic community leaders. Black teachers and principals were no more wanted in white schools than were black children. But there was no Supreme Court mandate extending employment rights to educators whose schools were summarily closed.

As Mr. Buck sees it, this led eventually to the concept of “acting white”, or the notion, held among some black children that aspiring to academic success was neither appropriate nor desirable because academic achievement, post-desegregation, was a “white” thing to do. Interestingly, Mr. Buck has been unable to find any references to the concept of “acting white” the pre-date desegregation. Prior to desegregation, there seems to have been no stigma at al in the black community regarding academic achievement. In fact, Mr. Buck asserts that blacks were more aligned and supportive of educating black children (often paying out of their own pockets to build black schools, for example) than they are now.

Buck sees the change in black youth culture as a classic case of out-group non-conformity where a minority group that is held in contempt, as black children were – and to some extent still are in many of our nation’s schools – makes a conscious decision not to conform to the norms of the in-group majority. In the earliest days of desegregation, black children sought to recapture the group identity they lost when their schools were closed and they were forced into hostile environments. As members of a new out-group, these kids they began adopting non-conformist attitudes, the most powerful and insidious of which was the notion of  not “acting white” which came to mean not participating in a white-dominated academic world.

Buck connects the construct of “acting white” to the Achievement Gap in a very simple way: regardless of a black child’s socio-economic status, many black children, both boys and girls, simply do not aspire to be like their white peers in terms of academic achievement. Their choice is not based on ability or even family values related to education which, for most families of all races and ethnicities, remain uniformly strong. It’s merely a social construct among teenagers seeking group identity in a situation where, more than a half century after Brown, they still feel unwelcome.

If Mr. Buck is correct, and I believe he is, then you’re correct, too. It’s not just that education must be privileged over integration, but that integration cannot be achieved, as fully as we have once hoped, without sacrificing educational equity for some children. As I imagine Stuart Buck would see it, this is also an ironic legacy of desegregation.

This does not mean, and Buck does not suggest, that we must go back to segregated schools. In fact, he is against this. He offers no particular solutions to this problem, however, though he is clear that any forced return to segregated schools is morally unacceptable.

This leaves us with a problem to address. However, there is not an obvious constituency, per se, to address it, nor are there any obvious policy solutions either. Personally, I believe there are cultural solutions and that we must pursue them vigilantly. But, like most cultural change, these new ways of looking at the world have to manifest themselves virally through ideas that slowly alter two current worldviews: a “white” world view that thinks institutional racism is behind us and a “black” world view that knows it’s not but that wants to fight the old fights by the old rules. Neither view accurately captures the situation as it is today. And that bodes ill for progress, I’m afraid.

School segregation is not ideal. But de facto school segregation is socially workable if it contributes to significantly improved academic achievement and politically workable if it never becomes even remotely associated wit the de jure segregation of the past. It’s important to realize, I think, that the essential educational problem blacks faced prior to Brown was not access to white schools but access to good schools, something kids of all races and ethnicities still face today – even white kids need better access to better schools. So, as I think you’re advocating, we will do better to view this situation as a school quality issue as opposed to a racial equality issue. Good schools for all children must be our highest priority. Racial make-up must, for now, be a distant second at best real point of Brown is lost if we lose sight of the fact that concept of school quality is not race-specific.

It’s also important, I think, to be very clear, in hearts and in our heads, that de facto segregation is materially different from de jure segregation. We read too much into Brown, I think, when we conceive of it as some kind of great opportunity-leveling decision. It wasn’t. It was symbolic, of course, but in reality it was technical and structural. The inherent wrongness of Plessy lies in its late 19th century de jure nature, not in mid-20th century de facto reality. We now know, from charter schools systems like KIPP, YES, ICEF, and others that segregated education can not only be equal but superior to integrated education. We also know from historical record that there were many excellent black schools prior to Brown, schools that were all too often summarily closed, even when they were newer and in better condition than white schools within the same district.

Still, many in our country, both black and white, are deeply troubled by the resegregation of our schools. But as I watch them by the thousands in nearby Raleigh, NC, lining up to protest at Wake County School Board meetings, I note that few are fighting for education directly, and none seems to mention children very often at all. Most are fighting for integration directly, education indirectly, and civil right symbolically, as though somehow they were all the same thing.

Unfortunately, neither side in what has this summer become an historic regional battle is correct. If the new neighborhood schools policy is over-turned, it will have no effect on school quality. If it is upheld, school quality can be maintained with judicious action by the district below the board level. In neither case, however, is education in Wake County likely to improve for anyone in the near future. Worse yet, the balance of power that just swung in the white majority’s favor at the last school board election, will surely swing back soon. If school assignment policies change each time the board does, all we’ll be doing is destabilizing the lives of our children—a bad prescription for kids of any color or life circumstance.

Like you, I believe the education must come before integration in national reform. But what does that mean in terms of changes in policies and attitudes? Here are four ideas I’ve had recently:

Do not impede the natural development of de facto segregation through school choice, neighborhood schools, and charter school creation. It’s very clear that sending kids to places where they don’t feel welcome, and away from their homes and communities, while good for integration, is not good for education. At the same time, districts like Wake County, which implement neighborhood school policies, must achieve resource equalization through “money follows the kids” funding formulas. Districts which find themselves disproportionately resegregated must be held to higher standards in their efforts to staff of every school with high-quality teachers and administrators.

Reframe the achievement gap in terms of meaningful life outcomes not test scores. Measuring the achievement gap with test scores is one of the most pernicious causes of the gap in the first place. For one thing, using this measurement, it will never close unless test rigor falls so low that passing becomes meaningless. There will always be test score differences among groups with varying socio-economic resources—and the tougher the tests, the larger those differences will be. Second, state test scores are meaningless for many reasons, not the least of which is the fact that states change their scoring on a regular basis. Having all kids reach “proficient” in the state of North Carolina, for example, would only be an indication of equally low achievement because proficiency in our state is set so low. Third, what we want is not equality of academic achievement, but equality of meaningful life outcome opportunities. This means, for example, that closing the gap must be reframed around those academic achievements that correspond to quality of life. Test scores do not. College attendance, however, does.

Here in Chapel Hill, I’ve started the “20/20 Vision” for our schools. Simply put, I have proposed changing our current meaningless district mission statement to something as simple as this: “By the years 2020 all students will graduate from high school with the skills and scores they need to succeed in higher education.” Kids don’t have to go if they don’t want to, but the choice should be theirs, and not the whim of a failing system that rejects one of the most basic expressions of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Higher education can mean anything from getting an associate’s degree at the local community college to getting a B.A. from an Ivy.

If most of the white kids go to elite universities and most of the black kids go to regional colleges, is this still a gap? Yes. But not one that necessarily represents a meaningful difference in life outcome opportunity. A kid who works hard in community college can easily gain entrance to the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill for a B.A., then hop over to Duke for an M.A. (basketball allegiances notwithstanding), and from there to a Ph.D. at Harvard, Yale, MIT, or Carnegie-Mellon. The point here is not that one group of kids gets it better than another, but that all kids get a path to the same endpoint should they choose to pursue it. The gap we must close is not one of achievement but one of opportunity. And getting to college—any college—is the most meaningful way to provide that opportunity.

Does this mean every student has to go to college? Not at all. But we must give every child the skills necessary to do so if, at any time in their lives, it becomes a priority. This gives kids the choice, not the system. The system is inherently unequal and we cannot address that at this time through educational policy alone, and perhaps not even through social policy. The equalizer, then, must be a form of educational emancipation. All children must have the opportunity to pursue higher learning if and when they so choose. If some degree of de facto segregation helps us reach that goal, then it is something we must tolerate.

Solve the “out-group non-conformity” problem in our schools. Mr. Buck’s insight about the power of out-group non-conformity is frightening. But it’s also fixable. It does require, however, a cultural change at the district and community levels and this is not an easy thing to do. Certain behaviors and attitudes, on the part of both children and adults, can no longer be deemed acceptable. As human beings, we may not be color-blind, but academic achievement must be color-blind. This can be accomplished with community leadership both within our schools and without. Awareness and acknowledgment of the problem is the first step. I hope that Mr. Buck’s book and his thesis are explored in depth by many school and community leaders.

Allow limited federal “charterization” in extreme circumstances. In states that do not allow charters, or in states that have reached charter caps, the federal government must be given the power to force local districts to authorize new charter schools where significant and longstanding educational inequities can be shown. Here in Chapel Hill, for example, we have what I believe to be the largest test-score-based achievement gap in the nation. Our district, despite its long record of civil rights support, and our community, despite its long history of liberal voting, create and maintain an academic environment that does not welcome children of poverty or children of color.

Four charter schools – three K-8 and one high school – could solve this decades-old problem. In all likelihood, de facto segregation would occur as majority white families would certainly want to stay in what are regarded as some of the best schools in our state. Unfortunately, North Carolina has been at its charter cap for several years and will not authorize any new charter schools.

Here, in Chapel Hill, where the achievement gap is so great, and in some of the rural counties in our state where overall achievement is so low (particularly in the “Leandro” schools which are still under federal mandate), additional charter schools could provide, if not a solution, at least a path to the future promise of a solution.

Integration is a worthy value for our society to pursue, and we must keep pursuing it. But with regard to education, integration can no longer be seen as an end in itself. As a means to the end of a more just and equitable society, integration is a powerful force. As a policy tool for shipping kids around to schools where their needs will never be served, it is an ironic impediment to social justice.

2 Comments on Voices of the Dropout Nation: Steve Peha on Integration and Systemic Reform

Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type bool in /home/dropoutn/public_html/wp-content/themes/ralphkrause/ralphkrause/parts/mjr.php on line 47

Voices of the Dropout Nation: Steve Peha Offers An Alternate History on the Reading Crisis


Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type bool in /home/dropoutn/public_html/wp-content/themes/ralphkrause/ralphkrause/parts/mjr.php on line 47

As the founder of Teaching That Makes Sense, Steve Peha has spent much of the past 15 years working on developing professional development regimens that help teachers improve their own…

Just like former NBA player Roger Mason, everyone must help solve the reading crisis in order to stem the dropout nation.

As the founder of Teaching That Makes Sense, Steve Peha has spent much of the past 15 years working on developing professional development regimens that help teachers improve their own academic instruction. But the former tech manager — who once scored the theme for the 3.1 version of Microsoft’s Windows operating system — is also a passionate contrarian, confounding both sides of the debates on the reform of American public education. From where he sits, there’s still much to be done to improve education (although he admittedly takes issue with such issues as using student test data in teacher evaluations).

Peha is particularly worried about the nation’s reading crisis (a subject covered constantly by Dropout Nation). His following essay, a response to my piece in The American Spectator on reading, offers a different perspective on the “reading wars” of the 1980s and 1990s that have helped fuel some of the crisis. Although one may not fully agree with his perspective, he makes some important points on how to improve reading and step away from the “phonics versus whole language” debate that really shouldn’t exist:

I enjoyed your piece in the Spectator on our nation’s reading problems. Clearly, as you point out, this is a very serious issue, and the teaching of reading lies at its core. However, I think you might be missing a simpler and more promising solution to the problem.

First, I’m always fascinated by people who pin at least some of the blame for our nation’s literacy problems on Whole Language but who seem to have little direct understanding of or experience with it.

As you note in your article: “Although the problem may begin at home, America’s public schools and education policies have also exacerbated the literacy problem. Few teachers at the elementary level are well-skilled in teaching children how to read; theories such as whole language — which emphasized reading whole books without dealing with phonics or understanding the context behind sentences and paragraphs — have also wreaked havoc on reading instruction.” (Editor’s Note: The piece also notes that most reading experts argue that students need both phonics and Whole Language — and that schools do poorly in both areas).

I wonder what your experience as a reading teacher tells you about this. Or what your preferred choice of method is. “Phonics” is not a method of instruction. It’s just a taxonomic domain of all alphabetic languages. So the question isn’t “Does one teach phonics?” it’s “How does one teach phonics?” And I’m curious as to how you teach it, what methods you’ve tried, and what success you’ve had.

I don’t know if you’ve ever met any of the people who invented Whole Language or if you’ve studied reading with any of them either. I have. And none has ever said, “Don’t teach phonics!” In fact, all were quite insistent that phonics be taught extensively. So I’m not sure where people got the idea that Whole Language was incompatible with phonics instruction. Historically, I have only heard this false assumption from the media, from education analysts, and from teachers who do not understand Whole Language and who typically implement only one tiny part of it: the use of authentic high-quality literature, a practice that is now supported and encouraged by just about everyone.

“Whole Language” means “using the whole of the language” and that includes phonics. Many people understandably confuse “Whole Language” with the “whole word” approach to reading in which children learn to read by memorizing entire words. (Even the top neuroscientist in the world, Stanislas Dehaene, makes this mistake in his recent book “Reading in the Brain” — which is a great book, btw). Sometimes people call this the “sight word” approach, too.

Just to bring some historical perspective to our discussion, I have a book published in 1952 by a major educational publisher that introduces the “whole word”, or as it is also sometimes called, the “see-say” approach. This approach — and not Whole Language — dominated literacy instruction for many decades and still exerts an extremely powerful influence today. By contrast, Whole Language was practiced for a much shorter period of time by a much smaller number of teachers in the US (less than 1% by most accounts and for less than twenty years, as opposed to other approaches with 50- to 100-year life spans) and can therefore have had very little impact pro or con with regard to the current state of affairs.

For an interesting stat: the annual Whole Language conventions of the mid-90s typically drew a few thousand people. The main International Reading Association conventions of the same period drew several hundred thousand. “Traditional” reading has always dominated “whole language” about 100 to 1 in our country. It is probably 500 to 1 now. Also, if the “Whole Language Ruined California” meme is still alive and well, that statement can be shown to be false simply by looking at CA’s reading data during the crucial period in question. Regie Routman lays this out in chapter one of her book, “Literacy at the Crossroads.”

In reality, “The Reading Wars” were not about “Whole Language vs Phonics”. That was mostly a media construction. Whole Language includes phonics — hence, it’s “wholeness”. The real question wasn’t “Phonics or no phonics?” it was “In-Context phonics instruction plus other modalities” versus “Out-of-context phonics study using primarily a single modality”. The Whole Language folks also asserted that kids could use writing as a way of gaining entry into the “literacy club” as Frank Smith so aptly named it. The fact that the Whole Language folks lost the debate was more a result of how they chose to participate in it than it was a result of failed practice or bad theory. There was also a lot of money at stake, money that the Whole Language folks didn’t control. Systematic de-contextualized phonics instruction is a multi-billion dollar industry. Whole Language folks contended that such expensive programs were unnecessary. Publishers were eager for systematic phonics instruction to become “law” (as it effectively did) and fearful that if Whole Language took hold, schools would no longer purchase expensive reading programs.

When Reading First and No Child defined what could be funded and what could not, companies making systematic phonics programs gained a lock on billions of dollars of annual revenue. Any good Whole Language teacher can show in just a few weeks of kindergarten that expensive systematic phonics programs are unnecessary, wasteful, and grossly inefficient. Even when I don’t teach Whole Language, I teach systematic phonics just fine with paper, pencil, chalk, and my brain, which has within it just a tiny, but useful, bit of knowledge about the phonetic and orthographic realities of the English language. This is all anyone needs. And since one has to be a reader to be a teacher, it seems strange to me that we should pay for things that all of us ourselves have mastered to which we all have equal access. The alphabet isn’t copyrighted and neither is the process by which human beings decode words. Nor has the human brain evolved in any significant way in the hundred generations or so since our alphabet was created. Anyone who can read can teach reading if they’ll be honest with children about how our language works and how literate people make their way through it.

The “war” was over money not method. And — sad but true — when I spoke with the founders of Whole Language in the mid-90s about which way the war was turning they simply said that their philosophy of educating children did not include using the federal government as a tool for picking educational methods or economic winners and losers in the publishing business. Ultimately, the original Whole Language people were teachers, not capitalists, while many of the “phonics first” folks — if you’ll look closely at the history of the time — had significant financial interests in the outcome. The Whole Language folks were also essentially Libertarian in their political outlook. This made it impossible for them to participate fully in the politicization of education that occurred during this earlier period of reform.

At the time, I was highly critical of the Whole Language folks for sitting things out. But in speaking with them on many occasions, I did come to understand their point of view, even though I still don’t agree with it. Education is patently political so we all have to roll up our sleeves and get into the sausage-making business from time to time whether we like it or not.

Ultimately, the war was decided by two people who had never taught any children to read (other than their own perhaps). Marilyn Jaeger Adams and Reid Lyon were the two central figures in pushing the “phonics first” debate at the federal level. But neither was a trained reading specialist. Furthermore, a close reading of their seminal works at the time shows that they weren’t nearly as certain of their thesis as they wanted others to believe. The results — or, rather, the non-results — of the Reading First program, which represents our nation’s most closely studied large scale longitudinal experiment in systematic phonics instruction, and which is based directly on Ms. Adams’ and Mr. Lyon’s work,  are clear: Reading First kids show no differences in comprehension by third grade than non-Reading First kids. So, obviously, Ms. Adams and Mr. Lyon were at least partially incorrect in their understanding of how children learn to read and how reading might best be taught.

Personally, I have received training in straight phonics, modified phonics, Whole Language, Reading Recovery, Direct Insruction, Success for All, DIBELS, Phonographix, Fountas & Pinnell, and DISTAR. Whole Language subsumes them all — though Reading Recovery is a close, systematic approximation; and Fountas & Pinnell feels a lot like Whole Language written out in a book. Whole Language provides a complete and self-consistent model of literacy learning that extends from phoneme to meaning. If one actually teaches Whole Language, kids actually learn whole language. It’s also the only approach to reading — because it is whole — that explicitly acknowledges the role of writing in learning to read.

It is also the only approach — other than Phonographix — which acknowledges the simple structure of the English language and English orthography as a basis for instruction. When someone tells me I can only teach “phonics”, I usually choose Phonographix as my preferred method, but I note that it’s basic approach to sound-symbol instruction is identical to that espoused by founding Whole Language practitioners and even people like Maria Montessori. Really, it’s just a matter of following the language and, ultimately, that’s why I have come to think that no external “program” is required — unless a teacher doesn’t know how our language works, in which case one might rightly conclude that learning this information was a reasonable pre-requisite to becoming a reading teacher.

And here’s where we all probably miss the easy pickings when it comes to solving our nation’s literacy crisis. We already know EXACTLY how to help children learn to read. There are only three things we don’t do now that we need to do in order to make sure more kids become fluent readers by the end of 3rd grade:

1. Teach letters by sound rather than by name. This is the only significant change to “phonics” that needs to happen; and unfortunately, even most phonics programs don’t do it (Phonographix does which is why I use it when I have to). Ironically, most phonics programs teach phonics backwards — symbol-to-sound instead of sound-to-symbol. And this, I think, more than any other single historical “accident” has contributed to the problems we have today. Walk into any kindergarten classroom and you’ll undoubtedly see some version of the “A is for Apple” approach. This is backwards. It is also patently confusing. I think it is this early confusion that stalls so many kids, particularly those who have less support at home, in their first formal reading experiences. And, from all the remedial tutoring I’ve done, I believe this “failure to launch” creates a serious attitudinal barrier to future success for some kids.

2. Have kids write regularly from the first day of school. Use invented spelling with a particular form of correction that allows kids to see and hear the sound-symbol relationships, to avoid learning mistakes, and to better develop their phonemic awareness through authentic application. The “correction mechanism” that seems to work best for me is having kids underline any word they are unsure of. Then, I can come around and quickly jot those words on a post-it note for children to correct themselves or I can correct the word “phonemically” (phoneme-by-phoneme to show sound-symbol correspondence). Kids can’t spell many words at first, so almost all their early written words are underlined. This helps them get more corrections from me which they like.

As they correct more words, they write more words, and begin to write more of them correctly. The practice they get of spelling by sound is the best application of phonemic awareness. Handwriting practice improves grapho-motor skills, and simple “write it-read it” exercises reinforce conventions. For the young learner, writing is the most powerful application of language. If we didn’t have it — or the need to use it — reading wouldn’t exist. It’s also the best brain workout a kid can get because it requires all the skills of reading plus the logical skills of math. It makes identifying reading problems like dyslexia easier as well. And for kids who may have visual problems, they can read their own handwriting just by making it larger — something they can’t do with a book.

3. Have kids read a lot in books they can read easily. Concentrating on stamina and fluency in the primary years has been shown to be a top predictor of future success. Most kids don’t read enough. Most kids don’t read enough on their own. And most kids don’t read enough books that that they can read well. Thus, most kids spend most of their time making decoding errors, reading with limited fluency, and ultimately with limited understanding. This makes reading hard when it should be fun. After a year or two of school, many kids have learned that reading isn’t fun, or meaningful. And yet, they have also learned that it is essential to their survival. This is a bitter pill. And the spoonful of sugar they need is as simple as letting them pick books they like at levels they can read independently and fluently.

Other than making sure kids learn a lot of “stuff about the world” in order to develop a reasonable amount of “domain specific” knowledge (see the work of E. D. Hirsch and Dan Willingham), focusing on the previous three elements would probably do the trick for 80 percent-to-90 percent of the kids we’re failing now. The remaining group will probably be found to have more specific problems like minor dyslexia or attention issues that require other interventions.

It’s not enough for us just to rail against the state of literacy in America, nor merely to make vague pronouncements as to what we think our problems might be. Fortunately, we no longer have to. It’s also no longer valuable to rehash the “Reading Wars” and to use “Whole Language” as a scapegoat — few people actually met the “goat” or even knew what it looked like anyway, and the federal government slaughtered it in 2001. As I’ve said, the dreaded “whole word” approach, which is still the most common approach in use though it has been entirely discredited neurologically (again, see Dehane), is what most people confuse with the “Whole Language” approach. This is not apples and apples. It isn’t even apples and apple sauce. The two approaches have nothing of substance in common that I am aware of.

The real tragedy, however, is not the rehashing of old arguments, or the fashioning of new ones, it’s that fixing our nation’s literacy crisis is doable within a 5-year window no matter what side you think you’re on. As soon as we, as a nation, institute the three ideas I mention above, along with a few other logical additions to support their implementation, we’ll see very few 4th graders on the NAEP with “Below Basic” scores.

4 Comments on Voices of the Dropout Nation: Steve Peha Offers An Alternate History on the Reading Crisis

Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type bool in /home/dropoutn/public_html/wp-content/themes/ralphkrause/ralphkrause/parts/mjr.php on line 47

Voices of the Dropout Nation: In Quotes


Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type bool in /home/dropoutn/public_html/wp-content/themes/ralphkrause/ralphkrause/parts/mjr.php on line 47

“We’re going to stop lying to children and lying to families [about curriculum quality]… We have to challenge the status quo on when schools are failing… We think it is…

Remember, read to your sons and daughters.

“We’re going to stop lying to children and lying to families [about curriculum quality]… We have to challenge the status quo on when schools are failing… We think it is unacceptable” — U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan on Common Core State Standards and overhauling failing schools at the Military Child Education Coalition’s annual conference, via Dropout Nation’s Twitter feed (go ahead and follow).

“What’s frustrating is that there is a real issue here demanding attention. The trade-off between flexibility and prescriptiveness in federal school turnaround policy is a complicated one without a lot of good answers.  Too much flexibility and districts and states take the easy way out and do nothing meaningful for students stuck in lousy schools. Too prescriptive and you get meaningless box-checking (as we may be seeing overall with the current dollop of school improvement funds), perverse consequences, or you stifle innovative approaches that might work if educators could try them.” — Andy Rotherham responding to Michael Winerip’s claptrap of an article on the consequences of federal education policy.

“We need to push school districts to frame summer school as a good thing, something extra — not a punishment. There is a cultural barrier that we have to overcome.” — Ron Fairchild of the National Summer Learning Association on the need for summer learning (and ultimately, for year-round schooling), in Time.

“But why are we more willing to overlook lackluster test scores in middle class schools?” Mike Petrilli on laggard middle class schools (traditional and charter).

“My hope is that many of them improve, but at the same time, we need to make sure the bar is high. I’ve got two children in the system, and I don’t want a ‘minimally effective teacher’ and I don’t think anyone else does, either.” — D.C. Public Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee on her decision to dismiss 241 laggard teachers.

“Each year we visit the teachers at least twice – once in the beginning and ten again towards the end of the year. It’s a great opportunity to understand how our kids are progressing and to brainstorm areas of concern or ask questions. But the one thing that always surprised me is that no one from the school has ever asked us to review the teachers. Ever… I think the current model doesn’t give enough credit to our great teachers and doesn’t shine a bright enough light on the teachers that aren’t delivering the goods.” — Tech investor Bijan Sabat on the need to evaluate teachers.

“While you argue about Duncan and standardized testing and charters…teach little keisha, tyrone, twon how to read, ok?” — Nikolai Pizarro (@iwantwealth) on the complaining of defenders of traditional public education over school reform.

Check out Dropout Nation this week for news and commentary on the reform of American public education. And listen to this week’s Dropout Nation Podcast on recruiting, developing and rewarding more good-to-great teachers.

Comments Off on Voices of the Dropout Nation: In Quotes

Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type bool in /home/dropoutn/public_html/wp-content/themes/ralphkrause/ralphkrause/parts/mjr.php on line 47

Voices of the Dropout Nation: Steve Baranyk on Indianapolis’ Academic Failure


Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type bool in /home/dropoutn/public_html/wp-content/themes/ralphkrause/ralphkrause/parts/mjr.php on line 47

As a consultant, Steve Baranyk used his corporate background to advise Indiana’s state officials on how to reform its bloated bureaucracy and overhaul how public schools handle their spending. But…

Steve Baranyk (right) and his wife, Susie (center). Photo courtesy of Atterbury-Balakar Air Museum

As a consultant, Steve Baranyk used his corporate background to advise Indiana’s state officials on how to reform its bloated bureaucracy and overhaul how public schools handle their spending. But the Purdue University-educated engineer and his wife have used their skills to help students in Indianapolis — an epicenter of the nation’s dropout crisis — overcome educational deficiencies and graduate from school. In this Voices of the Dropout Nation, Baranyk — a Dropout Nation reader and follower of the editor’s columns — offers insight on why reading is so critical to academic achievement — and why schools and families must take stronger roles in solving these issues. As shown at Dropout Nation in numbers, if you can’t read, you can’t do math. And you won’t graduate:

Christamore House is a neighborhood services agency located on the near-Westside of Indianapolis dedicated to serving the families of one of the poorest neighborhoods in the city.  Its programs include a series of youth outreach efforts to high school students to help them stay in school to graduate with a diploma.

In Indiana each student is required to pass an exit exam, the Graduation Qualifying Exam (GQE) to obtain a full diploma.  Each student has five opportunities to pass this test, which covers both Math and English, beginning in the first semester of their Sophomore year and ending in the first semester of their Senior year.  The subject matter tested is the same each time the students take the test although the specific questions may change.  In essence in order to obtain a full high school diploma in Indiana a student must demonstrate proficiency in both Math and English at the ninth grade level.

For four years, my wife and I tutored high school students one evening a week at Christamore House to help them with their academic progress.  As an engineering undergraduate I tutored in math while my wife, a speech and hearing therapy graduate,  tutored in English.  We also initiated a series of Saturday morning “seminars” on the GQE [which is being replaced by a series of end-of-course exit tests] to help these students prepare for the exam.  Many of the students we worked with had already taken and failed the exam.

My method in Math was to obtain copies of previous GQE math exams and to take the students through these question by question.  A student would come to the board and we would all work through the problem, the student at the board as well as those sitting down.  I also provided tutorials on problem solving methods to help them develop more effective skills.

During the first such GQE seminar, it became painfully obvious to me that most of the students were ill prepared to take the exam. Not because of limited math skills, but because they could not read sufficiently to comprehend the problem statement.  Once I explained the problem, most of them could work their way through the math mechanics.  But without the ability to read and comprehend the problem statement they were doomed.

And the saddest revelation for me was that these young people, from sophomores to seniors, knew they lacked the reading comprehension skills to pass the GQE. So they essentially gave up.  They had no hope of passing.

The director of Christamore House’s youth programs and I met with the administration of the high school that these students attended to ask if help might be available in the form of some remedial reading programs.  While we received a warm welcome and were politely listened to, they in essence told us they had no such programs available for these students.  And they had no real answers to the issue of how these students were allowed to proceed through the grades while lacking basic reading skills.

In my judgment, this experience represents almost criminal behavior on the part of the school system involved and the homes of the students.  It is obvious that the schools were well aware that these students lacked basic reading skills, and yet they allowed them to be passed on without remediation.  And it represents a broader societal failure as the homes from which these students came obviously place no importance on the basics of education.  They accepted failure as the norm.

While I do want to protect the identity of the school itself I do want to note that this school is not a part of the Indianapolis Public School district – it is one of the 8 other township school districts located in Indianapolis.  This particular school district is reputed to be one of the better school districts in Indianapolis. Indeed it has many successful graduates.  But it has demonstrated that it is not capable of dealing with some of those students most in need of help.  While I do not have this same first hand knowledge with other Marion County school districts, I can image that this condition is not unique to the particular school district involved.

Unless and until we, as a society, demand better performance from our schools, and demand that the homes from which these students come accept more responsibility for the academic success of their children,we will not solve this problem.  And if we permit this problem to continue we are sowing the seeds of the destruction of our entire society.  Failure is not an acceptable option.

Editor’s Note: In the piece, it was mentioned that there were six other townships in Indianapolis. That error, inserted during editing, was corrected.

Comments Off on Voices of the Dropout Nation: Steve Baranyk on Indianapolis’ Academic Failure

Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type bool in /home/dropoutn/public_html/wp-content/themes/ralphkrause/ralphkrause/parts/mjr.php on line 47

Three Questions: Steve Barr


Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type bool in /home/dropoutn/public_html/wp-content/themes/ralphkrause/ralphkrause/parts/mjr.php on line 47

Steve Barr probably didn’t think he was taking a new, grassroots-centered approach to school reform when he started the Green Dot collection of charter schools back in 1999. A decade…

Photo courtesy of PopTech

Steve Barr probably didn’t think he was taking a new, grassroots-centered approach to school reform when he started the Green Dot collection of charter schools back in 1999. A decade later, before stepping down as chairman of the charter school operator, Barr managed to rally the city’s Latino parents to revolt against the systemic incompetence of the Los Angeles Unified School District, took control of one of the district’s dropout factories, and formed a charter school in New York City in partnership with the American Federation of Teachers that broke with traditional union work rules. He also proved that the poorest Latino children — many of whose parents are immigrants legal and otherwise — can achieve academic success, even if the Heather Mac Donalds of the world choose to think otherwise.

Barr took some time during a drive from L.A. to San Francisco to offer his thoughts on school reform, working in the grassroots on improving education, and the disconnect between Beltway-based reformers and those who work on the ground. Read, think and consider.

What is the one surprising thing you have learned during your work starting up Green Dot? How did that affect your own approach to school reform and civil rights?

The most surprising is a daily surprise. You have to challenge all preconceptions. People don’t like to talk about it, but [those preconceptions] come down to race and politics. I have yet to meet a group of people who don’t care about the conditions of education. What’s surprising to me is no matter where you from, who you are, is how intensively interested people who are about education because they love their own kids. But if you listen to people, they think that only certain people care about education. They say “you only succeed because you get only these kind of children or they have these kind of parents.

What people don’t realize is how bizarre that statement is. There are only one or two percent of people out there who don’t care about kids. But that’s not most people. Out of the 8,000 kids we have [at Green Dot], only a dozen of them are white.

When I started Green Dot, I didn’t have kids. I wasn’t married. I wasn’t even close to being married. Now that I have kids and I’m married, I get it more. I get why [Green Dot’s parents and others] are intensely interested in education. Every day, I find it reassuring that people care about improving education. It gives me hope.

Is there a disconnect between school reformers inside the Beltway and community activists – and why does it exist (if it does)?

I think it is hard to stay connected in Washington. This is why I’m loathe to go to Washington. It’s a company town. It is also an incredibly segregated town. Once you are there, it is hard to stay connected. It is also an elite class of folks. It doesn’t mean you can’t work with folks. It doesn’t mean there isn’t any good work done. It’s just that it is hard to make the connection between them and what is done out here.

How can school reformers and grassroots activists work together to improving education for poor Latino and black children?

If you truly want to improve education for the urban poor, you have to truly immerse themselves in their communities. You have to approach it with an open mind. When we open a school, we do a lot of outreach. When I go into an African-American church, I have to realize that they have been lied to by people for a lot of years. It means I have to come back there again and again and build trust. The first time, it may not go well. But that’s the work. You have to understand where people come from. Over time, you build trust with them. They will become reformers as well.

2 Comments on Three Questions: Steve Barr

Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type bool in /home/dropoutn/public_html/wp-content/themes/ralphkrause/ralphkrause/parts/mjr.php on line 47

Three Questions: Michael Holzman of the Schott Foundation for Public Education


Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type bool in /home/dropoutn/public_html/wp-content/themes/ralphkrause/ralphkrause/parts/mjr.php on line 47

As Research Consultant for the Schott Foundation for Public Education, Michael Holzman has helped shed light on the impact of low teacher quality and systemic academic failure on the educational…

Photo courtesy of the Schott Foundation for Public Education

As Research Consultant for the Schott Foundation for Public Education, Michael Holzman has helped shed light on the impact of low teacher quality and systemic academic failure on the educational and economic prospects of young black men. Through his research, Holzman and Schott have done plenty to show in numbers the depths of the nation’s dropout crisis: Few young black men are graduating from school; far too many are being relegated into special education (and placed on the path to dropping out); and that in many urban districts, young black men are subject to the kind of educational abuse that would lead to incarceration for school officials and teachers if it were actual physical abuse. Along with Robert Balfanz, Jay P. Greene and Christopher Swanson, Holzman is one of the leading figures in revealing the nation’s educational decay.

Dropout Nation wondered what reformers such as Holzman were thinking these days, what are some of the surprising conclusions they have reached, and what they think about what’s happening inside the Beltway when it comes to school reform. The result is a new series, Three Questions on School Reform. Holzman offers some of his thoughts below. Read them, give them some thought and, if you so choose, comment and offer your own conclusions:

1) What is the one surprising thing you have uncovered during your research on special education and over-labeling of children as learning disabled and why?

Male African-American students are systematically over-labeled as Mentally Retarded in most districts.  In some cases this reaches levels five to ten times the percentage of male White, non-Latino males.  As percentages of non-institutionalized mental retardation in any large population are approximately the same, this over-labeling seems to be caused by district policies or staff training deficiencies.

2) How is black male academic failure and special ed connected and why?

Given that male African-American students are under-represented in gifted/talented programs in most districts, and very under-represented in Advanced Placement classes, it appears that racial and gender stereotyping takes place in those districts, to the great detriment of opportunities for learning for male African American, and, to a lesser extent, female African American and both male and female Latino and American Indian students.

3) What is the one thing school reform activists inside the Beltway seem to ignore when it comes to addressing education and youth issues and why?

Equal opportunity to learn includes opportunities during traditional k-12 class-time and beyond.  All schools should be equally well-supported, without regard to location and family income.  This means that real estate tax-based school finance methods are inherently inequitable.  It means that variations in the quality of facilities, curriculum and teaching staffs among schools within large districts cannot be rationally justified.  It means that the distribution of students through assignment or “voluntary” methods, as with charters and public school choice, are only equitable when the child least able to protect him/herself is protected by the adults responsible for the schools.

It also means that the educational investments available to the children of middle class families should be provided for children living in poverty by those adults responsible for the schools.  Such investments include 0-3 pre-literacy activities (such as library programs for toddlers), pre-kindergarten programs preparing children for schooling, all-day kindergarten, after-school and summer academic programs, throughout elementary and secondary school.

Another issue, which is not well-framed in most policy discussions is the connection between inadequate schooling and incarceration.  This is not merely a school to prison pipeline.  It is a feedback loop.  As astonishing numbers of male African Americans are imprisoned, it follows that between one-third and half of African American children grow up in poverty, raised by their mothers without financial contributions from their imprisoned fathers (or fathers whose income possibilities have been impaired by involvement with the courts and prisons).

Poverty is a major negative factor in regard to educational achievement, limiting the time of the parents as first teachers, limiting out-of-school educational investments, increasing the likelihood of enrollment in inferior schools.  And limited educational achievement, especially for male African Americans, is highly likely to lead to prison.

There are two lines of work that can break this cycle:  1) End the inequitable targeting of African Americans for drug law infractions; 2)  Make educational investments equitable.

2 Comments on Three Questions: Michael Holzman of the Schott Foundation for Public Education

Type on the field below and hit Enter/Return to search