Archive for June 16th, 2005

Someone understands

According to Michael Barber of the Herald Today (Bradenton, FL, US), the Florida area has many children from ethnic minority groups who score poorly on the statewide test of achievement.

MANATEE - Before they can come up with a solution, school and community leaders are striving to find out why many African American students in Manatee County continue to perform poorly on the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test.

Recent FCAT results revealed 72 percent of local African American students scored below grade level and 71 percent tested below grade level in math. Those scores are lower than any other ethnic or socioeconomic group in the county.

Mr. Barber continued, “School and community leaders cited poverty, ineffective teaching methods, societal factors and problems with the FCAT itself to explain the low scores” (my emphasis). Fortunately, he found someone who mentioned the unmentionable. To be sure, SES is highly correlated with school outcomes, but it doesn’t have to be that way. There are examples (see Houston, Baltimore) where schools in poverty areas are pulling ahead of their advantage counterparts, so it can be done. It may not be possible to do it everywhere, but putting effective practices into place would be a great way to eliminate that particular explanation for low scores…and give some kids the skills they need to escape poverty!

Link to Mr. Barber’s extensive story. If you read the whole piece, you can see who gave Mr. Barber the tip.

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Increased funding in one LEA

Tristan Schweiger of Daily Times via delmarvanow.com:

SALISBURY — It was a teacher’s aide who happened to be working one-on-one with an autistic child who first alerted Art Federspill to the fact that his youngest daughter is autistic.

That child is currently a special education student at Wicomico Middle School, and Federspill was one of several parents who spoke at a Wicomico County Board of Education public hearing Tuesday night to advocate for better programs for children with special needs. The board is currently debating how to allocate its Fiscal Year 2005-2006 budget.

“The training of teachers and aides is so very, very important,” Federspill told board members.

The Wicomico County Council added $800K to the school budget. Any bets on whether, say, 10% of that will go to staff development on using effective practices?

Link.

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