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Trenton Op-Ed: Obama has it all wrong re: black & Latino kids mired in worst-performing schools

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Bluebear Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-09-10 02:56 PM
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Trenton Op-Ed: Obama has it all wrong re: black & Latino kids mired in worst-performing schools
Last week, President Obama said he favored federal rewards for local school districts that fire underperforming teachers. As he was addressing a U.S. Chamber of Commerce gathering, President Obama also advocated closing failing schools.

The president's definition of "failing" schools seems to be centered around those that had not fixed chronically troubled classrooms or graduated a high percentage of its students.

The cornerstone of this presidential outreach respecting the problem of poorly functioning public schools was the possible allocation of $900 million in grants for which districts could compete. States and local school districts stand a good chance of winning a portion of that federal educational pot if they can prove that they have aggressively sought to cure their low test scores and abysmal graduation rates. An indication that the Obama administration is very serious about this initiative is that the president has already included it in his 2011 budget request to Congress.

From President Obama's attention-grabbing keynote address at the 2004 Democratic National Convention to his unjustifiably criticized post-Labor Day 2009 address to millions of American students imploring them to work harder in school, it has been evident that the president (himself a Columbia University and Harvard grad) will accept no excuses for poor, black and/or Latino kids not excelling in school. In this regard, he is quite similar to his predecessor, President George W. Bush. As many of us know, Mr. Bush received some well-deserved criticism for getting the United States involved in a foreign conflict (i.e. the war in Iraq), where the alleged antagonist didn't possess the nuclear arsenal Bush cronies Colin Powell and Dick Cheney assured us they did. At the same time, though, some of us would agree that Mr. Bush has never received the praise he deserves for launching (with invaluable support from the late Sen. Ted Kennedy) an educational initiative that had as its baseline objective narrowing the gap in test scores between the different socio-economic and racial or ethnic groups. I allude to the Bush-propelled landmark federal educational legislation of 2002, most commonly known as the No Child Left Behind Act.

Contrary to some public misperceptions about this groundbreaking Bush legislative package, it was never intended to preclude kids from getting left back when warranted. Rather, No Child Left Behind was initially crafted with an expectation that all American public schoolchildren would be reading, writing and computing on grade level by 2014. And, to President Bush's considerable credit, when he said "all" public school children, he meant all such children. Certainly, many black Americans (myself included) were not big George W. Bush fans. However, but for "W"'s insistence that it was time for America's educational leaders to finally address what he called "the soft bigotry of low expectations," folks like me (i.e. concerned parents) would not be able to easily access the test scores of the different demographic groups attending the public schools in my home community and surrounding towns. Availability of this data allows us to closely scrutinize achievement test performance of the different demographic groups and thus compare, for example, how our local white and black students are faring relative to one another.

It is with this in mind that I suggest President Obama -- perhaps like New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and his stated desire to "reform" urban education -- has gotten it all wrong when it comes to improving the performance levels of black and Latino kids mired in some of America's worst-performing schools. What the affected communities need isn't so much a purge of second-rate teachers as it is an "accounting," if you will, of non-supportive parents. Imagine inner-city cops getting fired because the streets they patrol are frequented by criminals. Or trash collectors getting canned because folks with little apparent home training throw gum wrappers, fast-food restaurant bags and empty soda bottles on the streets where hard-working (and many times, poorly paid) sanitation workers collect bagged garbage.

Accordingly, as the president's FY2011 budget gets dissected by an increasingly divided Congress, I hope some elected person (Democrat or Republican) will have both the insight and the courage to share with the president's top educational advisors that it's been "enough already" with the media "beat-down" of teachers. Why? Because at the end of any school day, high test scores are directly related to how supportive parents are of their children's academic endeavors. Or, perhaps better and more succinctly stated: "It's the parents, stupid."

http://www.nj.com/opinion/times/oped/index.ssf?/base/news-0/126803072631350.xml&coll=5
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mitchtv Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-09-10 03:05 PM
Response to Original message
1. K&R
still net 0 recs
three local HS's made the shit list here yeaterday
Indio HS
Desert Hot Springs HS
West Shores HS
I ask why Admin never gets fired or loses pay?
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xchrom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-09-10 03:10 PM
Response to Original message
2. I'll. Rec this -- we've discussed on du before how parents should be held
Accountable when more eggregious things happen
with young kids.

So why not school?

It's atleast worth thinking about.

But other than that -- as long as we continue to fund
schools through property taxes - low income schools
will have problems associated with not having enough money.

Low income schools in particular should be the heart and soul
of their community.

Budgetary priorities.
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EFerrari Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-09-10 03:14 PM
Response to Original message
3. I don't think the solution to bashing teachers is to bash parents.
It may be well deserved in some cases but still, not very productive. There are better arguments to be made against the collective punishment of school full of teachers -- like the zero evidence that it produces a better school. That might be a place to start!

lol
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NJmaverick Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-09-10 03:47 PM
Response to Original message
4. Yeah let's blame the minorities for the teacher's short comings
:puke:
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Igel Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-09-10 06:36 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. Correlation does not mean causality.
However, causality does mean causality. And a lot of the problems with the kids of poor, uneducated parents and parents are caused by having poor, uneducated parents.

They showed correlation. Then they showed the causal connection between parents and children. QED.

It's offensive, it's annoying, it's outrageous: But far too many kids are victimized by their parents, not sexually, not emotionally, not psychologically, but educationally.
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