Showing posts with label curriculum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label curriculum. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 05, 2014

Testing Uproar Hits Annapolis Today

This just in from the Public News Service:

ANNAPOLIS, Md. - Maryland takes up debate about school testing today at a House of Delegates hearing.

Del. Eric Luedtke, D-Burtonsville, is sponsoring legislation that would cancel this spring's Maryland School Assessments - testing that is required under federal law, but states can request a waiver.

Parents, teachers and others have good reason to support the move, Luedtke said, because Common Core curriculum roll-outs around the state would make the long-used assessments inaccurate.

"People look at this and say giving kids a test that they're not being taught the curriculum for is ridiculous," Luedtke said.

A new Common Core-based assessment will be used next year. The Maryland State Education Association and the Maryland Association of Boards of Education agree and are backing the bill. The Maryland Education Department supports administering the tests - promoting value in determining school performance.

Luedtke admitted that the state is in a tough spot because of the requirement to test. But even if legislation doesn't move quickly enough to force a request for a waiver, the state still could skip the testing and pay a penalty. His guess is that the penalty would be less than the cost of testing : $6 million. He sees a benefit in the discussion because the public has become so engaged in what's going on with education.

"Common Core implementation and implementation of the new PARCC Assessments - I think people are very worried about whether or not we're doing that right," he said.

The No Child Left Behind Act requires yearly testing for grades three through eight.

The hearing on the bill, HB 117, will begin at 1 p.m. before the House Ways and Means Committee. Details of the bill are online at mgaleg.maryland.gov.

Friday, January 31, 2014

Md. superintendents criticize implementation of school reforms

By Valerie Strauss, January 30 at 4:33 pm "Nearly all of the superintendents of Maryland school districts have signed a statement that criticizes federal and state education officials for forcing them to implement several major reforms, including the Common Core State Standards, on what they say is an unrealistic timetable...." Click here to read the full story.

Gates Foundation Gets It Right This Time

Vicki Phillips is the Director of Education at the Gates Foundation, and a key decision-maker in the Foundation's education reform agenda; helping to guide the hundreds of millions of dollars the Foundation invests in education reform. Phillips recently posted a commentary on the Common Core that calls for caution before attaching high-stakes to the new standards and evaluation systems. She said:

  • "The key principle is giving teachers and students time to adjust to new expectations before they face serious consequences for not meeting them
  •   "Teachers should benefit from the insights that come out of the evaluation systems as soon as they are available, but districts should ensure that there is a baseline and several years of data before using these systems to make personnel decisions
  •  "...test scores shouldn't be used to make consequential decisions, such as whether students should graduate, until we are sure we understand how to interpret the results". 
  •  "...no new schools should be singled out (as needing improvement) based on new assessments until teachers have had a few years to get used to the new ways of working". 

 It's not often that teachers, parents, and the big ed reform foundations like Gates all agree. Let's hope the Maryland State Department of Education is listening.

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

BOE Supports Call for MSA waiver

Montgomery school board backs bills to skip standardized tests set for spring in Maryland - because the tests no longer align with the new common core curriculum being taught. Read the story in the Washington Post. Congratulations to the Montgomery County Board of Education for this act in support of sanity - and to the many Montgomery County state legislators who are supporting this proposal. Discussions are also underway in Annapolis over the Maryland State Department of Education's plans for a federal ESEA waiver that attempts to mandate high stakes testing through 2017 and beyond. To communicate with your legislators about this issue, you can find their contact information here. Stay informed by signing up for the Maryland State Education Association (MSEA)'s online legislative updates here.

Monday, December 09, 2013

How Important are International Test Score Comparisons?

Every year when international test score comparisons are released, the press runs stories bemoaning the state of education in America. How important are these comparisons? See what Diana Ravitch has to say about them in this clear-thinking analysis on Huffington Post.

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Supporting English Learners: Educators Overcoming Roadblocks to Student Achievement



As part of its ongoing focus on equity in education, MCEA is sponsoring the third and final event of a three-part series on social justice and instructional practices for educators on May 28, 2013 at the MCEA Conference Center.

The Social Justice Series has focused on social justice issues and immigrant students in MCPS over the past year. Prior workshop topics included “The Maryland Dream Act and its Impact on Our Students” and "Immigrant Students: Working Together to Promote Their Success.”

At the upcoming teacher-led workshop, educators will examine issues related to English Language Learners and how to overcome obstacles to improving student achievement. Participants will review teacher-created English Learners case studies, collaborate with colleagues to identify and remediate roadblocks to achievement, and build capacity to advocate for students. The workshop is open to all MCEA members.

The Social Justice Series is a joint project developed by the MCEA Human & Civil Rights Committee, Minority Affairs Committee, and Instructional and Professional Development (IPD) Committee. There will be door prizes and light refreshments.

In addition to this Social Justice Series, MCEA has developed a partnership with McDaniel College to design and offer a graduate certificate program in Equity and Excellence in Education that provides an intensive, five-course graduate program in cultural competencies, race and urban education.

RSVP to Kiwana Hall at khall@mceanea.org  or 301-294-6232.

For more information on the Social Justice Workshops, contact: Carol E. Stewart, Special Educator, Northwood High School, (301) 649-8276

Wednesday, October 03, 2012

Teacher: What school reformers don’t know

MCEA member Lisa Farhi had this article posted in Valerie Strauss' Answer Sheet blog on the Washington Post website yesterday.

Great job Lisa!


Teacher: What school reformers don’t know

Policy makers and pundits don’t stop giving their opinions but we don’t hear enough from teachers in the debate about school reform. Many teachers ear their jobs may be jeopardized if they express their opinions; others say they have no time sit down and write a thoughtful piece.
One who accepted my invitation to write about the most pressing issues is Lisa Farhi of Montgomery County Public Schools in Maryland, who has worked as consulting teacher within the school district’s professional growth system, a kindergarten classroom teacher and now a staff development teacher.

By Lisa Farhi

“We’re citizens and teachers—and neither is easy. Good luck.”

— Deborah Meier, 2002, inscription in my copy of “In Schools We Trust


Back in 2002, I approached the microphone at the Washington D.C. bookstore Politics and Prose and told the author of “In Schools We Trust” that as a teacher degreed in human development, I was feeling
muzzled by the burgeoning high-stakes standardized testing movement. I said that in 10 years we would be slapping ourselves, saying, “OMG, we forgot about poverty” in our driven pursuit for so-called “accountability” of teachers and schools. We were choosing to ignore the conditions in which children live and how they affect their achievement in school.

Deborah Meier, still one of my lifelong heroes in education, told me to fight poverty as a citizen, not as a teacher.

That turned out to be good advice, considering that my schools superintendent at the time was a hard-liner who insisted that great teaching could overcome poverty, and because in the ensuing 10 years, proponents of No Child Left Behind hurled accusations of low expectations bordering on racial bias toward any teacher who raised concerns about economic struggles in the lives of children. I was heartened to read Helen Ladd’s and Edward B. Fiske’s comprehensive New York Times op-ed piece “Class Matters. Why Won’t We Admit It?”, which chastises us as a society for ignoring the effects of poverty on student achievement.
Daniel Pink, author of “Drive,” recently expressed disbelief that those purporting to reform education through pay-for-performance think that a student’s test score represents solely the influence of the teacher, not any other variables in the student’s life. He is astounded by the lack of logic in this argument.
Since Montgomery County’s new superintendent, Joshua Starr, invited Pink to a public book club discussion of “Drive,” I feel that the muzzle has been loosened by a couple of notches.

I am now almost brave enough to fight poverty as a citizen AND as a teacher. Through these years of standardized testing domination and de-facto gag orders on my concerns about the effects of poverty on student achievement, I have served as a consulting teacher within the Montgomery County Public Schools professional growth system, a kindergarten classroom teacher and now a staff development teacher.
Linda Darling-Hammond’s March 20th Huffington Post piece about a recent Met Life survey, which found the lowest level of teacher satisfaction in 20 years, was entitled, “Maybe it’s Time to Ask the Teachers?” Well, since someone asked. . .
As a mentor, trainer of teachers and classroom teacher, my most profound conflict has been to convince detractors, pockets of the teacher-bashing media and random cocktail party guests that it’s possible for me to hold the highest of expectations for every student who crosses the schoolhouse door, while also caring mightily about whether or not they’re fed, clothed, housed and healthy.

In my own training and in the training I deliver, equity is paramount; I actively coach teachers in how to engage every student, every moment for optimum teaching and learning. In those same sessions, poverty has been taboo for fear that if teachers discuss it, we will AUTOMATICALLY lower our expectations for student achievement. I find this mutual exclusivity insulting to our intelligence and an assault on our freedom of speech. Why are we not trusted as professionals to be capable of holding high expectations for student achievement while also caring about whether or not families need support?

It’s hard to be an informed citizen and sustain teacher morale these days. Value-added, a method of using student standardized test scores to ealuate teachers, is the new, unwieldy way reformers are rooting out perceived poor teachers.

Some of my colleagues in New York didn’t make the value-added cut by a percentage point, despite their glowing observation reports by administrators. Good luck replacing all of the dedicated New York teachers willing to work in settings where the neediest students toil. Transiency, varied content areas, out-of -control class size and unaccountable upper management affect value-added scores more than my dinner party mates will ever acknowledge.

But who is paying attention to whether or not local, state and federal agencies are dealing withour 22% child poverty rate? We all know that countries such as Finland out-test us on international exams. Finland has a child poverty rate of about 5 percent.

If I were not in favor of evaluating teachers, I never would have participated as a consulting teacher in the peer assistance and review program in Montgomery County Public Schools. Like employees everywhere, we teachers need to be evaluated. I support MCPS’ professional growth system because it has built-in checks and balances that, when challenged, can be brought to hearing through due process. The program provides one year of intense support for improvement prior to any dismissal decisions.

To use Pink’s terminology, teaching is a heuristic, complex task. Teaching cannot be codified enough to be rewarded like widget making. I’m glad to work for a school system that understands the difference.
Yet since I read and advocate a lot, it hasn’t been easy being the recipient of widespread condescension. It seems that the most respected thinkers in education reform are those with the least experience in my field, yet with the most money. Bill Gates, Eli Broad, the Business Roundtable and the Governors’ Association are heard way above the din of harried teachers, trying to lesson-plan their way to continued employment, while spending their daytime hours reaching students with a set of variables so differentiated that these teachers are making up to 1,500 decisions per day.

What we do know is that the schools demonstrating the most success in closing the achievement gap are addressing families’ struggles outside the schoolhouse. I will gladly open my mind to programs that wrap services like health care, psychological support, nutrition programs, employment counseling, adult literacy support and parent advocacy around the school. I will fight as a teacher and as a citizen to get these services paid for within our public school system via local, state and federal funding.

But why privatize and then tout what is known to work, while simultaneously abdicating a societal responsibility for putting such services in place in all public schools? From the perspective of a public school employee, it feels like a bait and switch: here’s what works but you can’t have it; look over here, doesn’t it look nice? Too bad, it’s not for everyone.

Finally, if Education Secretary Arne Duncan and President Obama wish to keep the good (closely examining subgroup achievement) and throw out the bad (narrowing of the curriculum, lack of creativity) of No Child Left Behind, then why have they created Race to the Top, which relies heavily on test scores to evaluate teachers? The curriculum will be no broader, no more creative and no more focused on subgroup achievement, if teachers’ personal livelihoods hinge on individual student scores. It’s contradictory, demeaning and it’s also a deterrent to equity. Will the finest among us want to teach struggling students under that type of algorithmic pressure? Instead, we should be using student data to make better daily instructional decisions, not as cut scores for continued employment.

I encourage any education reformer to spend a month in our shoes. They’ll soon see that teaching is not only rocket science, but also an art. It is complex and human. It should be measured humanely and supported by programs that elevate students out of poverty. 

Monday, November 08, 2010

Progress on Mathematics Reform

Two years ago, MCEA members were raising serious concerns about acceleration and sequencing in the mathematics curriculum. Discussions were held by MCEA's Councils on Teaching and Learning with representatives of the MCPS administration. As a result, the Deputy Superintendent created a "K-12 Mathematics Work Group" to explore the various and complex issues involved.

MCEA's President - first Bonnie Cullison and subsequently Doug Prouty - was a continuing participant. In addition, MCEA members were represented by six classroom teachers as well: Teresa Brown, Viers Mill ES; Karen Emmerich, West MS; Jeff Flowers, Poolesville HS; Natalie Howard, Strathmore ES; Ed Hsu, Magruder HS, and Dawn Lemon, Montgomery Village MS. Numerous parent representatives, principals and administrators also participated. They all put in untold hours researching and discussing best practices and national standards.

The Work Group Recommendations are being presented to the Board of Education on Tuesday 11/9. You can view the entirety of the Work Group's report online. The 11-page Executive Summary provides an easily accessible overview.

The recommendations were also reported on in last Thursday's Washington Post:

Montgomery County admits kids were pushed too hard in math
Washington Post, Valerie Strauss
     The highly-touted Montgomery County Public School system in Maryland has just admitted that it has been pushing a lot of kids to do accelerated math when they weren’t ready for it, and now will stop it.
     Many thanks to all the MCEA members who contributed to this system-wide assessment of the K-12 Mathematics program. Through surveys, focus groups, and feedback sessions, hundreds of educators helped identify the concerns and shape the recommendations.
There is still much work to be done. But this Report marks a significant step in responding to the concerns MCEA members began raising almost two years ago.

Tom Israel
MCEA Executive Director.