OK, I have just spent 5 minutes of my life listening to
Fordham's weekly podcast.
Subject:
suburban schools
Question:
Suburban schools are doing "fine" (or some such) teaching their white kids.
They are failing to teach their black kids.
Should we or should we not, as a matter of law, insist they teach their black kids, too?
Number one, how is this even a question?
Yes, I understand politics are involved: white parents, the middle class voter, blah blah blah.
What I don't understand:
How is this even a question?
Suburban schools should teach all children attending suburban schools.
the white kids aren't doing "fine"
Number two, suburban schools are
not doing fine teaching their white kids.
Suburban
tutors and
parents are doing fine teaching their white kids.
Scratch that.
Surburban tutors and parents are not doing fine, either. Many of us are merely hanging on, averting complete disaster.
This is why we have a Math War. We have a Math War because parents are aware they can't make up for the lousy math education their child is receiving at school.
If it were easy just to teach great math at home, we'd do it and forget about the math war. Or, rather, some of us would forget about the math war. I'd probably join the Math War for the same reason people climb Mt. Everest,
because it's there. But that's me.
why don't we have a Spelling War?
If pundits wanted to know why "high-performing" schools are failing to teach disadvantaged students, which they apparently do not, they might ask themselves why we have a Math War in the first place.
Why don't we have, say, a Spelling War?
My own school has failed to teach C. how to spell. When I asked his 3rd grade teacher— a terrific teacher in every other respect, a woman who
taught him 3rd grade fractions and made it stick—about his spelling, she laughed and said, "He's not very good, is he?"
Then she said she couldn't spell, either.
When we asked his 4th grade teacher, also an excellent teacher, she shared with us the method she'd ended up using to teach her own kids to spell. (As I recall, she had them write each spelling word 20 times.)
Then his 7th grade teacher told us: "I always tell the kids, if you can't write well nobody's going to care if you can spell,'" or something along those lines. (She, too, was a terrific teacher, an opinion I can probably document. C.'s grammar and usage in written work are very good for his age, and he didn't learn either at home.)
My email to the assistant superintendent in charge of instruction on the subject of a spelling curriculum for middle schoolers went unaddressed.
So: not only did my district not teach C. how to spell, my district routinely conveyed to us the attitude that if we wanted our child to spell, it was up to us.
Question:
Do you see me waging a Spelling War here in my district?
Writing a blog about spelling?
Answer: No. You do not.
The reason I am not engaged in a Spelling War is that, as it happens, it has turned out to be possible to teach spelling here at home. I spent a couple of weeks of my life Googling the known universe, trying to figure out what spelling actually was and why people can't do it; I bought a couple of books on the subject, which I have yet to read beyond the first chapter; then I cruised the available textbooks and lit upon
Megawords.
C. started the
Megawords series in the beginning of 5th grade.
*
He is now in 8th grade and is completing the 4th book in the series.
Last week I began testing him on all of the word lists contained in the first 3 books. Result: he's not bad.
"Not bad," in this context, is meaningful. Today his spelling errors are reasonable, as opposed to psychotic, which is what they were when he was 10.
For instance, when I asked him to spell
badminton, he said
b-a-d-m-i-t-t-e-n.
That is a correct guess.
I have now pulled out all of the words he missed from the first and second books (have yet to review Book 3), and will have him practice them sporadically as he works his way through Book 5. I'll do the same for Book 4 when we finish it this week.
It's clear now—even Ed says so—that by the time he graduates high school he will be proficient in spelling, or close enough.
This is why I am not engaged in a Spelling War. I think it's ridiculous my "high-performing," lavishly funded school district didn't teach my kid to spell.
I also know for a fact that some of the brainiest kids in the school can't spell worth a damn.
But I'm not having a Spelling War.
I'm having a Math War.
I'm having a Math War, not a Spelling War, because I
can make up for lousy spelling instruction, but I
can't make up for lousy math instruction.
Pundits appear to be singularly uninterested in the existence of a raging Math War across the land. If they spent 5 seconds paying attention to it, they'd realize their core premise where suburban schools are concerned is wrong.
Talk about the answer being right under your nose.
what does an achievement gap in a high-performing district tell you?
When you look at a suburban school and you see the white kids "doing fine," and the black kids not doing fine,
what does that tell you about the school's curriculum, pedagogy,
and accountability?
It tells you the school doesn't trouble itself with accountability.
The school does what it does; if the kids learn, great; if they don't, they're disadvantaged and what can you expect?
Humbug.
the slow girl track
This reminds me of a story I've probably told before. It appears in Ed's new book (not sure if it's out yet—I'll check).
The book is a collection of essays by French historians talking about why they became French historians.
In one of the stories, a historian who is.....in his 40s maybe?....writes that as a kid, he was a math hotshot here in the U.S. Then he went to France on a student-exchange program, and the French school put him in "the slow girl track."
Meaning: the track was the slowest the school had to offer
and it was filled with girls. The slow boy track was faster than the slow girl track.
He was in the slow girl track.
I say:
let's pick a high-performing suburban school district, do a student-body swap with a high performing school in Singapore, and see what happens.
Our kids are gonna get stashed in the slow girl track.
That's assuming Singapore even has a slow girl track.
Which it probably doesn't.
the physicist
Speaking of which, I sat by a former director of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory on my flight back from Illinois.
His daughter is now in graduate school, and he's
still exercised about the low quality of U.S. public education.
He told me, flat out, that no parent can remediate a bad math education.
** He'd said this repeatedly to his own school board, to no avail.
He had actually said, to his school board, "You have them sequestered here 6 hours a day and you're not teaching them anything."
This is a physicist and former head of the JPL.
Saying no parent can remediate a bad math program.
Reasonable conclusion: if the head of JPL can't remediate his daughter's lousy math education, I can't, either.
I wish our pundits would get a clue.
* The books are created to begin in 4th grade, continuing through 11th.
** I think he extended this to reading and writing, but I don't remember what he said specifically.
march of the pundits, part 1
speaking of pundits
march of the pundits, part 2
how to change the system
parents need a union
Independent George on the pundits and their ways
one is a nutjob, twenty five are powerful
first person
#marchofthepundits