Scurvy
Kungaloosh!
- Joined
- Apr 27, 2005
- Messages
- 4,282
Your assumptions about 3rd graders passing is wrong. Yes, they should pass but they won't pass at the same rates and the blend of kids is always going to be different so that effects the outcome as well. You could have one class of 3rd graders with outstanding students, no kids with learning disabilities and have them score 98% proficient then the next year might have some really great students but a higher concentration of kids that have learning difficulties of some form or another and only pass 87% of the kids. Does that mean the school went downhill, NO, it means that it is a different class of kids.
What they need to do is look at the progress EACH CHILD makes from year to year to really determine of a school is doing their job. If you take a 1st grader that can't read at the beginning of 1st grade and bring her up to read chapter books by the end of first grade-that is progress. Take that same girl in 2nd grade and she hasn't progressed past the basic chapter books by the end of 2nd grade, that is not progress vs what NCLB does do is take a class of 1st graders that can all read basic chapter books at the start of 1st grade and still can only read basic chapter books by the end of 1st grade but they already have a baseline that is enough to pass the test, is that progress-NO but then the next year they get a group of kids that can't read at the beginning of school and take them up to reading basic chapter books, except 4 kids that can't read at all because they have a learning disability. The class scores lower as a whole then the class before them and they are labeled "not showing progress" yet they are the only class that really DID show progress. THIS is what is wrong with NCLB.
Very well said.
