[Author Prev][Author Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Author Index][Thread Index]

Re: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2003432481_billgates16.html


  • To: <arn-l@interversity.org>, <ARN-state@yahoogroups.com>, "ARN-L" <arn-l@interversity.org>, "arn2-strategy" <arn2-strategy@yahoogroups.com>
  • Subject: Re: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2003432481_billgates16.html
  • From: "Dull, Chad" <DullC@westerntc.edu>
  • Date: Fri, 17 Nov 2006 17:04:04 -0600
  • References: <01fc01c70a9c$1817fe30$8201a8c0@Monty>
  • Thread-index: AccKm0OvQ7RAze04Svu1OHv+kyeugQAAWmE5
  • Thread-topic: [arn-l] http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2003432481_billgates16.html

Isn't Gates a college dropout?

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: arn-l-owner@interversity.org on behalf of Monty Neill
Sent: Fri 11/17/2006 4:59 PM
To: ARN-state@yahoogroups.com; ARN-L; arn2-strategy
Subject: [arn-l]
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2003432481_billgates16.html

A real piece recommendging unproven nostrums and full of political hackdom from
Gates. He mentions California which has about the lowest percentage of kids
required to pass tests for a school to 'pass' nclb of any state in the country.

Thursday, November 16, 2006 - 12:00 AM

Seattle Times

Guest columnist
Getting our children ready for school, college and work

By Bill Gates
Special to The Times

My wife, Melinda, and I have heard the tragic stories time and again. In
Washington and other states, we learn about talented high-school students who
don't fulfill their promise â?? not because they fail at school, but because our
schools fail them. They study hard, do well and get into college. But in college,
instead of the good grades they're used to, they get D's and F's. They take
remedial classes, but still they can't keep up â?? so they quit.

These are bright kids. All through grade school and high school, they do
everything we ask of them. But we don't ask enough. And then, after 12 years of
not asking enough, we suddenly ask way too much.

The statistics are as grim as the stories. Only 74 percent of our ninth-graders
graduate from high school in four years, and fewer than half of our graduates are
ready for college. And it's not just high-school graduates who are unprepared;
kindergarten teachers in Washington report that fewer than half of their students
come to school ready to learn. Across the whole spectrum of education, we are not
preparing enough students to succeed at the next level.

This is a huge problem. All of our kids need to be ready for school, ready for
college and ready for work. Right now, we're nowhere near that goal. To reach it,
we need to change the system.

Melinda and I have made improving education one of the central missions of our
foundation. In our experience, school systems that excel at each level â?? from
early learning through high school â?? have four distinctive traits: high
standards, clear accountability, flexible personnel practices and a climate that
encourages innovation.

First, educational standards. They have one central purpose â?? to ensure that
students make the most of their ability. By that measure, Washington's standards
are unacceptably low.

Washington Learns, a report recently issued by an expert committee created by
Gov. Christine Gregoire, recommends raising our math and science requirements. I
agree. Twenty-seven states require students to take three or four years of math
to graduate from high school. In Texas, students in the class of 2008 will have
to pass four years of math and four years of science. Washington requires just
two years of each.

I don't see why standards in Washington should be lower than standards in Texas,
or anywhere else.

Once we've set high standards, we have to assess whether those standards are
being met, and be able to take action when they're not. Yet, today the state has
no power to intervene in failing schools. No matter how badly the students are
being served, state officials cannot replace a principal, put higher standards in
place, or bring in new teachers. All they can do is sit and watch.

California has a different approach. There, if a school is identified as
low-performing, it can get a range of grants and other support to improve its
performance. If the school doesn't get better, the state superintendent is
required to take action, which can include bringing in an outside management
team. Since California adopted this policy, three-quarters of its low-performing
schools have improved enough to meet the standards.

California doesn't accept failing schools. Why should Washington?

Of course, raising standards means teaching more-rigorous courses, which in turn
requires highly qualified teachers, especially from the fields of science,
engineering and math. Washington has some truly outstanding professionals
teaching tough classes in our public schools. But we need to find more. To do
that, we need more-flexible personnel policies.

When it comes to recruiting and retaining talented professionals, our public
schools are at a disadvantage. Our system doesn't let them reward strong
performance or pay more for people with rare abilities. The Washington Learns
report rightly says our teacher pay system should recognize expertise, use
incentives and reward achievements.

Rigid certification procedures also keep talented teachers from entering the
classroom. We should open up the field of teaching to professionals who want to
become classroom teachers, but will not do so under the current system. A more
robust alternative certification process, for instance, would let qualified
people teach while they get certified.

Finally, our foundation has learned that great school systems are able to try
promising new approaches. Unfortunately, Washington is one of the most
inhospitable states in the country for educators who want to give new ideas a
chance.

Our foundation works with an innovative group called KIPP â?? the Knowledge Is
Power Program. KIPP is active in 16 states and has become one of the most
accomplished school-reform organizations in the country. It operates the
highest-performing middle school in Washington, D.C., and the eighth-graders in
KIPP's Newark, N.J., academy score in the 91st percentile in math.

KIPP would like to work in Washington state, but it can't. Unlike 40 other states
in the country, Washington does not allow charter schools â?? so the government
can't give KIPP permission to run its model here.

We have to accept that voters have rejected charter schools. But we can still
explore other promising ideas that have worked elsewhere, such as funds that
districts can draw on to intervene in failing schools, or a statewide "innovation
district" to support new schools in neighborhoods where other schools have
failed.

Let's decide whether we're going to move ahead or fall behind. If we have the
will, we can make Washington a world leader in education and economic growth for
the 21st century.

Bill Gates is co-chairman of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. This guest
column is adapted from his speech to the Washington Learns Education Summit at
the Bell Harbor Conference Center in Seattle on Nov. 13.

Copyright © 2006 The Seattle Times Company

Monty Neill, Ed.D.
Executive Director
FairTest
342 Broadway
Cambridge, MA 02139
617-864-4810 fax 617-497-2224
monty@fairtest.org
http://www.fairtest.org
Donate: https://secure.entango.com/servlet/donate/MnrXjT8MQqk



Post a Message to arn-l:

Your name:

Your email address: (use the exact address you are subscribed with)

Subject line:

Message: