CAT Tracks for November 7, 2010
WOKE UP...GOT OUT OF BED

...deep, dark depression plagued my weary head.

Is there no hope for public education???

Are the problems even beyond the power of Superman to correct???


Then...

...I located and read the two articles below!!!

Oh Happy Day...

I am refreshed...my spirit is rekindled. YES...there is hope!!!


(My commentary continues below the second article.)


From the Seattle Times...


Link to Original Story

Struggling West Seattle Elementary gets a fresh start

By Linda Shaw

In a corner classroom at one of Seattle's lowest-achieving schools, Ms. Coxon has dubbed her fourth-graders the Stanford Class of 2023.

Signs above the classroom door greet her 9- and 10-year-olds as the future students of her beloved alma mater and announce that "The path to college starts now." Her black cap and gown, with its red Stanford sash, hang on a wall inside, not far from where she's stapled a red-and-white Stanford pennant.

It's a little over the top, much like Chrissie Coxon herself, a confident, committed 25-year-old who is cheery but strict, and focuses on building her students' character as well as their academic skill.

The main purpose of the Stanford display is to put a name and a place to the concept of college - one of the many ways Coxon is trying to inspire her kids at West Seattle Elementary to dream big.

She is one of 12 new teachers who came to West Seattle this fall to take part in a $3.5 billion, national push to shake up schools where test scores have been in the basement for years.

Located in Seattle's High Point neighborhood, the school is one of three in the city, 18 in the state and hundreds more around the nation that won large federal grants aimed at helping them make dramatic improvement over the next three years.

The program is among a number of Obama administration education initiatives based on the premise that, with the right attitude, the right incentives and the right kind of support, many struggling schools can make far greater gains than they have in the past.

Some critics disagree with that mindset, saying it overlooks the fact that schools can't fully overcome bigger forces such as poverty in the lives of students. But the Obama administration is charging ahead.

Districts had to agree to try to turn their schools around in one of four ways, ranging from closing their doors and starting over, to taking a path called "transformation," the option that's in place at the three Seattle schools and many others across the nation. It's largely an improve-what's-there approach.

West Seattle Elementary is slated to receive about $1.2 million over the next three years. That's not enough to add hours onto the school day - one hallmark of low-income schools nationally where test scores are high. But West Seattle students did start nearly a week early this fall, and are spending 15 minutes more in class each day.

The grant also has brought a new principal (required if the existing leader has worked there more than two years), a new approach to teaching reading, new after-school activities and much more training for teachers.

There's more support for parents, too, including sessions on how to prepare for teacher conferences and help their children at home.

The stakes are high for everyone. Teachers whose job evaluations are substandard, or whose students' scores don't improve over the next two years, will be placed in another school. Principal Vicki Sacco's job is on the line, too.

Sacco and the teachers have agreed to let The Seattle Times track what happens this year as they work to reinvent and refine much of what they do.

So far, teachers - old and new - are confident they will make progress this year. At the same time, many are anxious about all the changes. There is no script to follow for any of the schools that received the grants. Many teachers have been working 12-plus-hour days and on weekends, and just nine weeks into the school year, some already are worrying about burnout.

"There is a sense of pressure, and there's a sense of urgency," says Sacco. "But everyone knew what they were getting into ... to a certain degree."

"Use every minute"

Coxon says her class here has more immigrants than at her two previous schools on the East Coast, but just as many of the kids are poor.

She's confident she can help them do better because she did that at the other two schools.

In her first two years of teaching at a public school in the Bronx, she said, her students' reading level went up by an average of two grade levels, and they mastered nearly all of New York's math standards. She had similar success the following year at a charter school in New Jersey.

Coxon became a teacher through Teach for America, a national program that recruits young college graduates into teaching. The program may be coming to the Seattle area soon.

Her teaching approach and philosophy reflect what she learned in both those places, plus what she's picked up from observing accomplished teachers.

One theme: maintaining a brisk, engaging pace.

"If you can hear my voice, clap once," she says one recent morning as students settle into their desks after an activity.

"If you can hear my voice, clap twice."

She sets a timer for three minutes, then picks up a soft red ball, which she tosses to students who raise their hands to share what they're writing about in their essays. The ball changes the mood a bit, she says. Students who usually hang back are drawn in.

"They want to catch the ball," she says.

Transitions between activities are swift, too. She gives students just 10 seconds to get from their seats to the classroom rug or vice versa. As they move, she counts out loud. "10. 9. 8. 7 ... "

Another theme: engaging their hearts as well as their heads.

She strives to get her students - and their families - invested in working hard at school. She talks with them about their hopes and dreams, and then works backward. What do they have to do in college to reach those goals? In high school? Today?

Earlier this year, Coxon handed out a sheet that showed her students how West Seattle Elementary's test scores compare with district and state averages. Many were surprised the scores were so low. To them, school was good if they liked their teacher. They hadn't realized they were so far behind.

"It makes me feel like slavery all over again," wrote one student, a girl named Rahwa.

"It makes me so mad, it makes me want to pull out my hair," wrote her classmate, Achara. "But instead, I'll work hard and go to college."

Coxon doesn't have as much time with her students as she did at her last school, a charter school where the day ran from 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

While she'd love that much time now, she's determined to succeed anyway.

"It just adds urgency to use every minute that I have," she said.

Finding the right teachers

All of the West Seattle Elementary staff members from last year could have stayed if they were willing to sign an agreement that they would work longer hours and face extra scrutiny - including being judged in part by their students' test scores.

But they also could choose to transfer to other schools - no harm, no foul. About half left.

The half who remained are relatively new to the school themselves. Only a handful had taught at West Seattle for more than a year.

The result was a chance for the struggling school to look at itself with fresh eyes.

The newly hired teachers mostly came from other states or districts, chosen in part because they've been successful in challenging schools before, said Erin Tillman, who was an administrator at West Seattle last year but opted to return to the classroom this fall.

Tillman said they also looked for people who were flexible enough to work closely with instructional coaches, consultants and their peers - expectations that come with the grant.

The teachers and other staff members who opted to stay are strong, too, Tillman said.

"I've never worked with this caliber of people overall."

The only first-year teacher among the new hires, Tara Slinden, says she feels like a freshman who somehow ended up on the varsity team.

She's working hard to keep up, she says, even placing a pad of Post-its by her bedside to jot down good ideas that come to her in the middle of the night. Not long ago, she wrote a whole lesson plan that way - on 14 little yellow squares.

Sacco, the principal, was nearly the last staff member hired. Superintendent Maria Goodloe-Johnson said it took time to find someone who had led a similar school through big changes. Sacco drove here from Florida in August, her Toyota Camry packed tight.

Because she arrived so late, the whirlwind that always accompanies a new school year was even busier.

It will be so much easier next year, is a frequent refrain among teachers and staff.

Already, the school feels different, teachers say. Hallways and the playground are much calmer than last year. And in the classroom, less time is spent on behavior, more on instruction.

That was one of the first tasks Sacco tackled. With help from staff, she thought through every procedure, from how students enter the building, to how many classes are in the cafeteria at any one time during lunch. The goal was to set consistent expectations to minimize problems.

Signs all through the hallways say "Straight. Right. Quiet. Polite." Shorthand for: Walk quietly and politely in a straight line, on the right-hand side of the wall.

With that in place, Sacco is now deep into working on instruction.

For West Seattle to reach its goals, "you need top-quality instruction in the classroom," she said. "That's the bottom line."

They have a lot of work to do. Sacco says she's impressed with the skill teachers have and how fast they're improving, but that many students have a long way to go.

In a recent meeting, the staff wrote each student's name and reading and math level on Post-it notes, then arranged the notes by level on the wall. The bulk of students in each grade were at least one year behind where they should be.

The fifth-graders in particular were spread very wide - all the way from kindergarten level up.

Climbing the mountain

Almost kitty-corner from her Stanford cap and gown, Coxon has taped up a big, butcher-paper tree beside a steep, brown mountain. The mountain represents the path to college. The tree is to track the students' climbs in reading.

Each time someone moves up a level, they celebrate.

One recent afternoon, those students were Anthony and Abdifatah.

Coxon leads the class through a finger drum roll as she announces their names. She asks Anthony which class cheer he'd like. Anthony picks the "paparazzi." Students pretend to snap a few pictures of him, then give him a thumbs up and a "lookin' good!"

Coxon asks what advice he has to help his classmates improve, too. "If I am bored, I just get a book and I read," he says.

Coxon emphasizes how much progress he's made, that they're all making.

Then it's time to head to the rug for a vocabulary lesson.

"10, 9." Coxon counts. " 8, 7 ... 6 ... 5, 4 ... "

Got to keep moving. There is no time to waste


From the Salt Lake City Tribune...


Link to Original Story

With iPods, Kearns High students touch education’s future

By Rosemary Winters
The Salt Lake Tribune

Nearly 1,700 students at Kearns High snagged a sleek new tool for their book bags on Friday: an iPod touch. Students at the high school screamed with delight during a kick-off assembly that featured students break dancing to digital beats.

“This is the most exciting day of my life,” said Kirsten Leaver, a junior who immediately began tinkering with her new iPod. “It’s so futuristic. You don’t even have to use books anymore.”

Her friend R.J. Hall, a senior, disagreed.

“It’s not even futuristic,” he said. “It’s what everyone should have today.”

That’s the idea behind Kearns High’s push to create 21st-century classrooms. This summer, the school received a $1 million federal stimulus Enhancing Education Through Technology grant. The money purchased iPods and educational applications for every student, and iPads for every teacher.

“It’s like having a computer lab in your classroom,” said Principal Stephen Hess. “What’s exciting about it is how it’s going to increase engagement of students and how it changes the practice of teachers. It’s going to be less ‘set-and-get’ style lectures and more student participation.”

Each iPod comes equipped with 428 applications. Students can keep track of homework assignments and get automatic reminders of due dates, create and study flash cards, and read text books while highlighting key points and looking up unfamiliar words in the dictionary. They also can study the periodic table for chemistry class, answer complex math equations, compose music and learn the constellations in the night sky. Students in an interior design class will be able to design their dream kitchens electronically, instead of with paper and pencil, and e-mail assignments to their teacher.

The iPod means that students can answer their own questions at any time during class, said English teacher Aimee Duran.

“It levels the playing field,” she said. “If I have one kid who’s a little bit behind and is afraid of raising his hand when I say a word he doesn’t understand, he can pull out the iPod and look it up himself. It really puts the responsibility back in [students’] hands.”

The program has earned some criticism. In August, Republican U.S. Sens. John McCain of Arizona and Tom Coburn of Oklahoma, included the Kearns High grant on a list of 100 questionable uses of stimulus funds.

“We’re here to prove them wrong,” said J.R. Finai, a senior and student body officer at Kearns. “Our school under- stands how important this is. We’re confident in this program and we feel very strongly that it will be a huge success.”

Teachers received training the past couple months — and some started last year — on how to teach with the iPods. They’ve also discussed ideas for how to make sure students don’t use the devices to goof off during class, Duran said. She plans to ask students to set the iPods face down on their desks when not in use for classroom work.

The school hopes to receive additional grants in the future to keep the iPods in student hands. Students will be asked to turn in their iPods, which retail for $229 each, during summer vacation. But they get to keep them if they graduate.

That, said Leaver, could lead to rising graduation rates.


If the above articles were not enough, here is a link to another that focuses on Wisconsin as a laggard in the midst of a national reform movement...

From the Journal Sentinel

Link to Original Story..."Building A Better Teacher"


CAT Tracks Editor's Note:

I was going to let the sarcasm speak for itself, but one of the pictures that accompanied the Seattle Elementary article caught my eye. (Click on the Link to the "Print View" of the Original Story to see them all.)

The caption indicated that it was taken during one of their teachers' meetings...

Keep in mind...the people pictured are the NEW teachers and the "OLD" folks who "bought in" - i.e. the "good teachers"!

If you wonder where the smiles are...

...you will have to go find the teachers who left!!!

In my mind's eye, they are grinning from ear to effing ear...


POSTSCRIPT:

There oughta be a law...

When the media does a story like this - trumpeting as they do the wonder of the reformers and the evil of the not-so-dearly departed - they should have to come back at the end of each of the next 5 years and report the test scores. Also...someone like Diane Ravitch should have to accompany them. You know...trust, but verify.

I would venture the opinion that THAT might shed a whole new light on the so-called "reform movement"...would bring the whole house of cards crashing down.

Instead, it will be like when the media does a retraction on some news story they got wrong...especially if they libeled someone. What happens in West Seattle Elementary or at Kearns High will be buried on the back pages or - more likely - not mentioned at all. Same old, same old results (or worse) just don't sell well and make the reporters and editors look stoooopid!


The views expressed above are NOT the official position of the Cairo Association of Teachers.