Well, my son's 2nd quarter report card came home today along with the results of the state tests he took in the Fall. I can't even begin to express my feelings.
The report card is split into two parts; one based on tests (1 - 5 rubric), and one based on everything else, I guess, (6-10 rubric). Nobody can figure it out. The published honor roll is based on the 6-10 scale I think to allow for what I might call full-inclusion on the honor roll. Few in town really know that the honor role doesn't include tests. There are three honor levels and about half of the students get on one honor roll or another. That half is very close to all girls. My son is the only boy at the top honor level. (I guess that full-inclusion doesn't apply to most boys.) I should be happy, right? His testing grades (1-5 rubric) are all very high. No problems. There are no problems in math, otherwise, I would have to blame myself.
The problem comes with the state testing results (for NCLB). Let me just say that our state tests might be a little on the fuzzy side, but they are selected and calibrated by teachers from our state, not some politicians in Washington DC. You can go out and look at the sample test questions. There is nothing unusual about the questions. They are easy. In Math, there is a correlation between his school grades and the state testing results. However, this has never been the case for reading, vocabulary, and comprehension. My top rubric level 5 son only gets a raw score of 71% on the simple state testing. This is nothing new. I saw this non-correlation with school grade back when he was in fifth grade, and it has only gotten worse. Considering the work I see coming home from his Language Arts and Reading classes, it appears that the school just does not believe in teaching reading comprehension. I think their philosophy is that a lot of reading solves everything.
Has anyone else seen this effect? I taught an after-school SSAT prep class last year and it seemed like everyone had trouble with reading comprehension. I've been waiting for the school to get serious about reading comprehension and writing and it just hasn't come. Just read, read, read. I did talk to the Language Arts teacher about reading comprehension at the beginning of the year and she talked a good talk about comprehension and expository writing, but I haven't seen anything.
Apparently there is a difference of opinion between our teachers and the ones who created the test. Maybe our teachers think that their indirect approach (read, read, read) will get the job done. Heaven forbid if they tackle comprehension by direct practicing. I think they have even given up on spelling and vocabulary. It's all about reading, and I'm not impressed by what my son reads.