[ Date Prev][ Date Next][ Thread Prev][ Thread Next][ Date Index][ Thread Index]
Fwd: [LiteracyForAll] Today's Commentary
- To: CA Resisters <ca-resisters@interversity.org>
- Subject: Fwd: [LiteracyForAll] Today's Commentary
- From: Susan Harman <susanharman@igc.org>
- Date: Wed, 10 Jan 2007 12:18:17 -0800
- Domainkey-signature: a=rsa-sha1; q=dns; c=nofws; s=dk20050327; d=igc.org; b=H6QRGAaNzQo6sokAdT3JvoKHcTTVRxOelDjcBpqYp3SPvW10qKu+buYCj8sFxpMH; h=Received:Date:Mime-Version:Content-Type:Subject:From:To:Content-Transfer-Encoding:Message-Id:X-Mailer:X-ELNK-Trace:X-Originating-IP;
Begin forwarded message:
From: headlamal@aol.com
Date: Wed Jan 10, 2007 5:07:20 AM US/Pacific
To: LiteracyForAll@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [LiteracyForAll] Today's Commentary
Reply-To: LiteracyForAll@yahoogroups.com
I published a commentary in today's Rutland Herald "The Destruction of
Our
Schools". It depicts the effects of NCLB on teaching and invited the
audience
to add their voices to the call to repeal NCLB. I thought you might be
interested.
Alis Headlam
Rutland, Vermont
The Destruction of our Schools
By Alis Headlam
Published January 10, 2007
Rutland Herald
The unraveling of all that has made our schools strong, our teachers
shine,
and our students thrive is a tale that unfolds before our eyes, but
remains
uncovered in the media. This hidden story is being carefully kept
under wrap
even as more and more people jump on the bandwagon complaining about
education
in our schools. At the center of this controversy is federal
legislation, No
Child Left Behind (NCLB). This single law has put our schools,
teachers, and
children in serious jeopardy of a complete meltdown.
Already in Vermont, half of the high schools are failing to meet the
annual
yearly progress standards. Many of our middle and elementary schools
are
either failing or in danger of failing as well. With the added
pressure of
testing, accountability and reading curriculum mandates, this bill in
one grand
sweep has undone years of professional development.
In Vermont the struggle to maintain a positive image of education is
further
exacerbated by local uproar over increased taxes. Who is talking
about the
increased pressures caused by NCLB as related to increased
expenditures by the
schools? No one, except Rutland Northeast Supervisory Union,
Superintendent,
Bill Mathis whose expertise on the subject has put him in a prominent
position nationally among educators, but caused him to be criticized
in his own
backyard.
Who is telling the story of the parents and children who are being
seriously
damaged by the misuse of high stakes testing and poor reading
programs?
There is Susan Ohanian of Charlotte, Vermont whose national
recognition has put
her in the spotlight for criticism and personal attack from those who
would
keep the secrets hidden. One has only to go to her website at
susanohanaian.org
to read stories that will curl their hair.
Who is taking up the challenge to get this message out to the people?
Certainly, one doesn’t find it on the front pages of the media. But if
you look at
the websites of organizations like the Vermont Society for the Study of
Education, _www.VSSE.net_ (http://www.vsse.net/) , you will find
plenty of
information that will raise the hairs on the back of your neck. What
is more
amazing is the difficulty that everyone has in gaining the media’s
support to tell
the story. It feels as if there is a giant conspiracy to dismantle
the public
schools so that they can be turned into business ventures where
financial
gain will become the primary engine. The danger in this is that
children are
not products and teachers are not machines. There is a human element
that
cannot be ignored if education is to be successful. The real danger
is that
instead of making sure that no child is left behind, we will increase
the potential
for poor, learning disabled, and underprivileged children to be
excluded
from educational opportunity.
Walk into most any school, even in Vermont, and it is possible to see
and
feel how the human element of education is changing. The tension is
evident.
Attend a school meeting and you will find teachers and administrators
straining
under the pressures of the imposed curricula, standardized testing
and threat
of government labeling. Problem-solving has been replaced by playing
it
safe. Many teachers and administrators are more pressed by the need
to look good
than with the need to find solutions to problems that address
individual
needs. Schools that once were joyful places have turned into
factory-like venues
where teachers are required by law to turn out classes of students
who can
respond to test questions like little robots. Many teachers whose
laughter once
rang cheerfully in the halls struggle with the ethical dilemma of
whether to
keep their jobs or provide the best education that they know is
possible for
all children. There is a silent exodus of our most experienced
teachers who
opt out for early retirement or change of career rather than face
another
year of confinement. Scripted programs do not allow teachers to
perform at their
highest potential. Teachers do not feel they have the power to
stand up
for what they believe in. Their voices are being systematically
squelched from
the top.
Talented young people who are training to be teachers struggle with the
dilemma of whether to complete their training or concede defeat. When
they learn
about the strict impositions of NCLB and they read the negative
reports about
education in the media, they wonder if they will be able to use their
newly
gained knowledge and skills in their profession. They worry about
having to
compromise their integrity by accepting curricula that imposes so much
structure they will not have time to consider the needs of their
children. They worry
about behavior problems and learning problems. When they are student
teaching they see that schools face more challenges now than in any
time in the
past. Many children come to school with anxiety and with emotional
needs that
require special attention. On a day to day basis student teachers see
more of
the teacher’s time being spent dealing with troubled, angry children
than with
creating rich learning environments that meet their needs. They
wonder if
this is a job worth the effort with only minimal rewards and threats
of
punitive results if the children they teach fail on a single
standardized test.
Thousands of educators, including teachers, and parents around the
country
are calling for a complete dissolution of NCLB, but their voices are
not being
heard. They realize that qualifying education by standardized tests
ignores
most of what comprises good teaching. Must they really take to the
streets to
get this message out where it will do some good? This is not so much
of a
political battle and an ethical battle. Can this country afford to
allow
education to self-destruct? It is time to put education back into the
hands of
expert educators who can lead the way towards a brighter future of
public
education. We could start by revisitng a document created in the late
1960’s called
the Vermont Design for Education. We could further amend this and
challenge
the increasing demands in today’s schools as they are addressed in
professional standards and ethics of the most widely known educational
organizations of
this country. Much of the necessary work needed to replace NCLB is
already
complete. There is a valid foundation that can be gleaned from these
documents.
Now is the time for all of us to take a stand against government
imposed
regulation under No Child Left Behind. For those who are interested,
a petition
is being circulated calling an end to this legislation. It has been
signed by
over 20,500 individuals including leading educators and is still
accepting
signatures. You can add your name by going online at
_http://www.educatorroundtable.org_
(http://www.educatorroundtable.org/) .
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Yahoo! Groups Links
<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/LiteracyForAll/
<*> Your email settings:
Individual Email | Traditional
<*> To change settings online go to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/LiteracyForAll/join
(Yahoo! ID required)
<*> To change settings via email:
mailto:LiteracyForAll-digest@yahoogroups.com
mailto:LiteracyForAll-fullfeatured@yahoogroups.com
<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
LiteracyForAll-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com
<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
Post a Message to ca-resisters:
|