Category Archives: AMPS

What Works? Reading Recovery!

The Department of Education’s What Works Clearinghouse has released their evaluation of early reading programs and the top rated program is Reading Recovery.

From Education Week:

Just one program was found to have positive effects or potentially positive effects across all four of the domains in the review—alphabetics, fluency, comprehension, and general reading achievement. That program, Reading Recovery, an intensive, one-on-one tutoring program, has drawn criticism over the past few years from prominent researchers and federal officials who claimed it was not scientifically based.

Federal officials and contractors tried to discourage states and districts from using Reading Recovery in schools participating in the federal Reading First program, citing a lack of evidence that it helps struggling readers.

“Tried to discourage” is a little mild considering what happened in Madison. Can we get our $2 Million now (with interest)?

More on Reading First from Jim Horn at Schools Matter

Thomas J. Mertz

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Who is to Blame?

(Hint, it isn’t the Oshkosh Area Board of Education.)

State Rep. Carol Owens (R. Oshkosh) issued a press release opposing school closings in the OASD. Owens voices such admirable thoughts as: “Our small community schools are
the backbone of the community,” and ““Our smaller, local schools need to be supported and not divided.” Bravo Representative Owens.

Of course sentiments divorced from actions are easy. Rep. Owens is in a position to work for meaningful state finance reform or at very least support the band aids and revenue limit increases in the JFC (or Senate or Governor’s) budget that would help some of the districts like Oshkosh and Madison avoid the draconian choices they face and truly allow Boards of Education keep under enrolled but vital schools open. Instead Owens votes the party line and our schools suffer.

Before posting this I tried to get a handle on the situation in Oshkosh and although it is a relatively low spending district, there are many things that parallel Madison. Strings programs are perennially targeted for cuts. Enrollment is relatively stable, but growing on one side of town and shrinking on the other. As Owens noted, attempts to deal with this (and the budget contraints of the state finance system, I’d add) have divided the community.

It is hard to say how intentional it is for some who resist adequate funding of education but the divisions created and the loss of popular programs because of fiscal pressures under the current system do result a loss of faith in and support for public education and that is certainly the long term goal of many anti-government, free market zealots.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Republican Education Offer

Not an offer you can’t refuse.

The Republican’s have sketched their new line in the sand on the education portions of the state budget (the linked document references this Legislative Fiscal Bureau analysis).

There is a very little movement and the GOP is still clinging to limiting the growth of the revenue caps to $200 per member. The rhetorical bait and switch on school funding, state contributions and property taxes also remains.

Keep those cards, emails and calls going.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Early-childhood program pays for itself, study finds

A new longitudinal study shows the effectiveness of intense early education intervention in our schools.

excerpts:

“More than 20 years later, educational attainment is higher and felony arrests are lower for the alumni of a Chicago early-intervention program for low-income children.

The enrollees, who are now in their late 20s, are also less likely to describe themselves as depressed and more likely to have health insurance, according to a follow-up study released this week.

According to co-author Arthur J. Reynolds, a child-development professor at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, the gains in terms of reduced social-welfare costs already have far exceeded the program’s $5,000 per student-year cost to the Chicago public school system.

“By the time they’re 65, a conservative estimate would be a 10-to-1 gain,” Reynolds said, considering reduced societal costs for remedial education, health care, incarceration and underemployment.”
……..
“These results have profound and encouraging implications for our ability to close the achievement gap” among disadvantaged children, said Gordon Berlin, the president of MDRC, a New York nonprofit agency that identifies social policy strategies that work.
………..
“This study begins to answer the question of whether a high-quality intervention could fortify Head Start and other early-childhood interventions, and power bigger results.”

Robert Godfrey

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Sign the petition to end the madness

The Educator Roundtable have started a petition calling for the dismantling of the No Child Left Behind Act and is now online.

To reach the 2014 goal set by this legislation, the standards must rise annually. Even school administrators who aren’t having trouble with meeting the goals of the program at the present time agree a train wreck is coming.

In a recent Time magazine article about NCLB, a retired Ohio superintendent said, “NCLB is like a Russian novel. That’s because it’s long, it’s complicated, and in the end, everybody gets killed.”

Unless NCLB’s schedule is disrupted, there will be no public school systems left by 2014. Unfortunately groups like the NEA have tried to counteract the Educator Roundtable petition with their own, which again pushes for a band-aid approach that will not address the core deficiences of such a poorly conceived public policy.

We need our voices to be heard. It takes twenty seconds max to do this. Please pass it on to all your friends.

Robert Godfrey

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(anti) NCLB Video

From Susan Ohanian via the Educator Roundtable and the Education Disinformation Detection and Reporting Agency (EDDRA)

Click here to watch.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Senate has the better education budget

By State Superintendent Elizabeth Burmaster

“Simply put, the budget advanced by Senate Democrats is the better budget for Wisconsin schools. The Assembly passed a budget that does not address our schools’ current fiscal challenges, and, in fact, would result in fewer resources and devastating cuts. With some school districts struggling to stay open, it is time to work on a state budget that truly provides the resources needed for the quality education that our students, parents, educators, and communities expect and deserve.”

continues…

Robert Godfrey

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Filed under AMPS, Budget, No Child Left Behind, Quote of the Day, School Finance

Cities and Schools working Together

From Brenda Konkel:

Cities and Schools working Together

A former City Council member sent me this article about how Portland is spending spending $1.6 million to keep poorer kids in their schools. They have a program they initiated to keep poorer students in gentrifying areas of the City. Apparently they lost 11,000 students as the poorer people move out of the area and the richer people move in and send their kids to private schools. And of course, that then meant that the school district was losing state aids. The money is used for rental assistance, gap mortgages and grants to parent and neighborhood groups.

The program is called the Schools, Families, Housing Initiative. And the money will be spent as follows:

<p

    *$950,000, will go to the Portland Schools Foundation for grants aimed at promoting neighborhood schools, so newcomers will decide to send their children to them. The grants could be for anything from repairing broken windows to designing an after-school program.<br /

      *$450,000 in rental assistance for families with school-age children in schools with high student turnover. I should help 80 families avoid eviction and keep their children in the same school.

        *$200,000 for a cash reserve, allowing the Portland Housing Center to offer about 40 below-market second-mortgages to help first-time home owners bridge the gap between the money they borrow and the house they want. The average amount would be about $5,000 per family.

      This is an interesting concept. It’s great to see the City working with their School Board. Do you think the City of Madison City Council, the School Board, Mayor’s office and School Administration will ever get to the point where they are actively looking at the impact of schools on our neighborhoods and develop strategies to help keep our schools and neighborhoods strong? Or will we continue down the path where we say “It’s the school board’s problem”? And the School Board says “It’s the City’s problem”? It’s not our responsibility, with everyone pointing in the other direction.

      It’s painfully obvious to so many in the community that as the schools go, so goes the City. I had thought there was some serious momentum to work on these issues between the City and Schools after last year’s school budget, but those efforts seem to have fizzled or taken the back seat to other issues and I think that is a shame. In fact, the Board of Education-City Liaison Committee hasn’t even met since the new council has been appointed. They have agendas for January, February and March but only minutes for their February meeting. Note, the two City Council members (Knox & Thomas) didn’t even show up.

      Just think, if the Cities and Schools were working together in a meaningful way, perhaps we could find partnerships and ways to help each other with the following:

        Getting kids safely to schools

        Crossing Guards
        Bussing (I think the schools spend something like $750,000 to get kids to school, in addition to $250,000 for bus passes for poor kids.)

        Space sharing

        Community and Neighborhood Meetings
        After school uses of space for community uses

        Sporting events & activities (We could coordinate usage of the parks. Most notably rentals at Breese Stevens, Warner, and a West Side park plus MSCR activities cost $80,000)

        Police Officers in the Schools – The schools pay for 4 police officers

        Coordinating planning efforts so that when we create new neighborhoods we are working with the schools to figure out where the kids will attend schools and what impacts it will have on the school district

        Coordinating human services

        Coordinating services at our libraries

      I’m sure you can probably think of more areas where we could overlap and mutually benefit each other. But it seems, we can’t even get this conversation started. I’d like to see it happen before the schools face their next big crisis and before our neighborhoods have to struggle more. Now is the time to be working on these issues, instead of taking a 4 month vacation from meeting. Or worse, before we’re spending even more money like Portland to fix the problems we helped to create.

There is some kind of “Education Summit” involving MMSD, the city and the county in the works. I hope both the Portland example and Brenda Konkel’s ideas are on the agenda.

More on municipal/school cooperation:

Engaging Cities: How Municipal Leaders Can Mobilize Communities to Improve Public Schools

Civic Capacity – What, Why and Whence

Investing in Urban Public Education Matters (ppt)

Civic Supports Publications (from the Annenberg Institute)

Thomas J. Mertz

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A Rally to Help Ensure Wisconsin’s Budget Reflects Our Values!

From Vicky Selkowe:

If you’re feeling frustrated about the state budget and are worried about the competing visions for our state being debated in the state legislature, then we need you to join us tomorrow for a Wisconsin Values Event at the Capitol. Short & sweet, done in 30-45 minutes (and then you can stop by a budget conference committee member’s office to deliver a message about what the state budget should REALLY prioritize…) We need a big crowd there tomorrow to highlight these values and show the collective strength of all these organizations & individuals – hope you can join us. Call me with any questions – 284-0580, ext. 326 or 772-6046.

Help Ensure Wisconsin’s Budget Reflects Our Values!

Join us for the Wisconsin Values Event

State Capitol Building, Senate Parlor

Thursday, July 26th @ 11:00 a.m.

The Wisconsin Values Event: A large and diverse set of organizations representing hundreds of thousands of Wisconsin residents are coming together this Thursday, July 26th for this Wisconsin Values event to provide an opportunity for policy-makers, the public and the media to hear from individuals whose daily lives are impacted by the decisions on this budget.

The organizations involved are united around the following Wisconsin values:

*Wisconsin values high quality early care and education and access to that care for all children, regardless of their parents’ income;

*Wisconsin values safe children, nurturing communities and supports for those with disabilities;

*Wisconsin values quality, affordable health care for all residents;

*Wisconsin values access to higher education; and

*Wisconsin values strong public schools.

Hope to see you on Thursday, July 26th in the State Capitol to ensure that the legislature hears our united voices calling on them to preserve our Wisconsin values!

Robert Godfrey

Update: K-12 education is a major focus of this event. One of the speakers is a Milwaukee Public Schools kindergarten teacher.

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About those studies . . .

Paul D. Houston, the executive director of the American Association of School Administrators has penned an interesting editorial (free sub. req’d) questioning the recent spate of studies suggesting large public support for NCLB Act as we head into a new round of negotiations for the reathorization of the act.

“Isn’t It Amazing? A Few Words on Those No Child Left Behind ‘Studies’

In recent weeks, we have seen a flurry of “studies” on the No Child Left Behind Act that seem to conclude that it is a wonderful thing. I suggest it is time we look behind the headlines.

The latest study, commissioned by the Educational Testing Service, concludes that when the public learns more about this federal law, they tend to like it better. (“To Know NCLB Is to Like It, ETS Poll Finds,” June 20, 2007.) Now, far be it from me to suggest bias here, but one must ask: Who has benefited the most from No Child Left Behind? Would it be the teachers, who have faced pressures complying with regulations that bear little relationship to sound educational practice? Perhaps it is the children, who have seen their classroom studies narrowed to allow for more time for testing and test preparation? No, so far the greatest beneficiary of this law is the testing industry, which has had more business than it can handle. This has led not only to higher profits, but also to inaccurate results and huge errors in scoring and reporting.

So, a testing-industry study that shows that a law which requires massive testing is a popular thing seems unworthy of the coverage it has received.

The results of the ETS study fly in the face of the results obtained by the American Association of School Administrators, when we studied the same issues. (“Critics of NCLB Ask Congress to Overhaul It,” Feb. 23, 2007.) We concluded that the more the public knew about the No Child Left Behind law, the less they liked it. Who is right here? Well, it all depends on the questions asked. The ETS study asked whether the public liked a program that applied rigorous standards to schools and whether making certain that all kids learn is a good idea. The answer was a resounding yes. (Gee, do you think?)

The proponents of the No Child Left Behind law are fond of pointing out that whatever gets tested gets taught. True. And whatever does not get tested gets left behind. There is little doubt at this point that NCLB has narrowed the curriculum and focused on test results to the exclusion of a broader educational experience. And there is little doubt that overemphasizing results on a standardized test leads to more standardization and less innovation and creative expression—the coins of the realm in the global race for success.

Having the testing industry study the results of a massive program of testing is like having the cigarette industry do a study of lung cancer.

The AASA dug deeper, underneath the bumper-sticker goals of No Child Left Behind. We asked whether it was a good idea to emphasize testing so much that it takes away time for learning, whether testing kids in English who don’t speak English was reasonable, and whether it made any sense to treat a school that had fallen down in one area the same as another that had failed in all areas. The conclusion by the public was that it didn’t.

Having the testing industry study the results of a massive program of testing is like having the cigarette industry do a study of lung cancer.

In another recent NCLB study, the Center on Education Policy, which at least has no dog in the fight, found that after five years of placing a huge emphasis on testing, test scores have gone up. I am sure. Put pressure on the teachers and administrators in our public schools to produce higher test scores and they will do that. Ask them, however, whether the children actually know more and they will tell you that this isn’t the case.

An educational program built around tests has the same validity as a nutritional program built around Twinkies. Twinkies provide instant gratification, but it is hard to build a case that they provide the same nutritional value as a balanced meal. Some might even argue that the sugar and calories have a deleterious effect on one’s health.

The No Child Left Behind Act is currently undergoing reauthorization by Congress. People who have a vested interest in seeing that the law is renewed are lining up to ensure that it is approved with as few changes as possible. Many have no clue as to what broad effects this legislation has had on our nation’s children or our ability to compete internationally. Perhaps before building a case for No Child Left Behind, we need a conversation on what we really want from our educational system—higher tests scores or children who can fulfill their possibilities. Those are not necessarily one and the same.”

Robert Godfrey

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