Texas School With 'Exemplary' Status Only Taught 2 Subjects,

Page 1 of 1 [ 11 posts ] 

MakaylaTheAspie
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 21 Jun 2011
Age: 30
Gender: Non-binary
Posts: 14,565
Location: O'er the land of the so-called free and the home of the self-proclaimed brave. (Oregon)

22 Nov 2011, 7:00 pm

Quote:
A Dallas elementary school that was given "exemplary" status for academic achievement only taught its third graders reading and math last year, and fabricated scores for every student in other subjects like social studies and science.

The Dallas Morning News reports that to propel the school's status, Field Elementary School Principal Roslyn Carter "directed and caused false school records to be created," so that teachers could focus on student excellence in reading in math -- the only subjects third graders are tested on for the state-wide Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills. Student performance on the standardized exam helps determine a school's status.

Carter is on paid administrative leave and has denied many of the allegations, noting that she was unaware of certain rules about grading. According to the investigation by Dallas Independent School District investigators, parents were never informed of the falsified grades, nor were they told that their children had missed nearly a year of instruction in subjects other than reading and math.

Students are receiving remediation as necessary to make up for lost time and education in untaught subjects, and 10 school employees were cited in the investigators' 227-page report for failing to report grade fabrication.

The news of Field Elementary's misconduct comes amid numerous allegations of cheating among the nation's school teachers. A report released in July following a two-year investigation revealed widespread cheating among nearly 180 of Atlanta's educators who corrected student answers on standardized tests.

About a dozen Atlanta educators implicated in that scandal lost their licenses in the first round of sanctions imposed last month, but further investigations have temporarily been halted.

The U.S. Department of Education has also joined the local investigation into allegations that D.C. Public Schools' steep improvements on standardized tests over two years were the result of widespread cheating. Officials called for the probe in March after USA Today reported on excessive erasures on answer sheets from more than 100 schools.

And in Connecticut, 160 students had to re-take their Connecticut Mastery Tests after teachers were found to have tampered with the exams. A dozen of the offending educators are losing 20 days pay and must serve 25 hours of community service by tutoring students after school. Nine of those teachers returned to classrooms last month.


EDIT: Link - http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/2 ... 07758.html


_________________
Hi there! Please refer to me as Moss. Unable to change my username to reflect that change. Have a nice day. <3


Tollorin
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 14 Jun 2009
Age: 44
Gender: Male
Posts: 3,178
Location: Sherbrooke, Québec, Canada

22 Nov 2011, 7:23 pm

Getting that school budget in US depend of evaluations it's don't suprise me. In fact I was expecting it. A competitive world encoourage cheating; it's even quite defendable ethicaly, with a local point of view, depending on the school situation. (It is about the future of the kids after all.)


_________________
Down with speculators!! !


Douglas_MacNeill
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 10 May 2007
Age: 62
Gender: Male
Posts: 1,326
Location: Edmonton, Alberta

23 Nov 2011, 12:28 pm

So, No Child Left Behind and its measure of Adequate Yearly Progress are beginning to bite once more.

This is becoming the second-most farcical domestic policy of the Bush administration after the attempt to privatize
Social Security.



ruveyn
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 21 Sep 2008
Age: 89
Gender: Male
Posts: 31,502
Location: New Jersey

23 Nov 2011, 1:54 pm

Douglas_MacNeill wrote:
So, No Child Left Behind and its measure of Adequate Yearly Progress are beginning to bite once more.

This is becoming the second-most farcical domestic policy of the Bush administration after the attempt to privatize
Social Security.


The result of a public (governmental) social security is its collapse. And the result of public "education" is mass functional illiteracy. The U.S. ranks below third world countries in science and math education. That is because the government runs our schools (mostly).

ruveyn



Tollorin
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 14 Jun 2009
Age: 44
Gender: Male
Posts: 3,178
Location: Sherbrooke, Québec, Canada

23 Nov 2011, 2:47 pm

ruveyn wrote:
Douglas_MacNeill wrote:
So, No Child Left Behind and its measure of Adequate Yearly Progress are beginning to bite once more.

This is becoming the second-most farcical domestic policy of the Bush administration after the attempt to privatize
Social Security.


The result of a public (governmental) social security is its collapse. And the result of public "education" is mass functional illiteracy. The U.S. ranks below third world countries in science and math education. That is because the government runs our schools (mostly).

ruveyn

Except that the countries scoring first also have public education.


_________________
Down with speculators!! !


ruveyn
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 21 Sep 2008
Age: 89
Gender: Male
Posts: 31,502
Location: New Jersey

23 Nov 2011, 3:16 pm

Tollorin wrote:
Except that the countries scoring first also have public education.


Good for them. In the U.S. public schools are a miserable failure. Placing the government in charge of any thing (in the U.S.) is a guarantee of failure.

ruveyn



Icyclan
Sea Gull
Sea Gull

User avatar

Joined: 19 Jun 2011
Age: 41
Gender: Male
Posts: 231

26 Nov 2011, 12:31 am

Tollorin wrote:
ruveyn wrote:
Douglas_MacNeill wrote:
So, No Child Left Behind and its measure of Adequate Yearly Progress are beginning to bite once more.

This is becoming the second-most farcical domestic policy of the Bush administration after the attempt to privatize
Social Security.


The result of a public (governmental) social security is its collapse. And the result of public "education" is mass functional illiteracy. The U.S. ranks below third world countries in science and math education. That is because the government runs our schools (mostly).

ruveyn

Except that the countries scoring first also have public education.


Obviously. Correct me if I'm wrong here, but as far as I know there's no first world nation where education is mostly privatized. Public schools are geared towards the dim-witted. Everyone's a winner, and everyone must graduate.



SyphonFilter
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 7 Feb 2011
Gender: Non-binary
Posts: 2,161
Location: The intersection of Inkopolis’ Plaza & Square where the Turf Wars lie.

06 Dec 2011, 12:32 am

Icyclan wrote:
Tollorin wrote:
ruveyn wrote:
Douglas_MacNeill wrote:
So, No Child Left Behind and its measure of Adequate Yearly Progress are beginning to bite once more.

This is becoming the second-most farcical domestic policy of the Bush administration after the attempt to privatize
Social Security.


The result of a public (governmental) social security is its collapse. And the result of public "education" is mass functional illiteracy. The U.S. ranks below third world countries in science and math education. That is because the government runs our schools (mostly).

ruveyn

Except that the countries scoring first also have public education.


Obviously. Correct me if I'm wrong here, but as far as I know there's no first world nation where education is mostly privatized. Public schools are geared towards the dim-witted. Everyone's a winner, and everyone must graduate.
Which means letting students through the cracks, even if they don't know jack s**t.



visagrunt
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 16 Oct 2009
Age: 59
Gender: Male
Posts: 6,118
Location: Vancouver, BC

06 Dec 2011, 12:49 pm

A classic, if somewhat extreme, example of, "teaching the test."

If your assessment and accountability standards are too lax, then you must expect that people will react accordingly.


_________________
--James


jojobean
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 12 Aug 2009
Age: 49
Gender: Female
Posts: 3,341
Location: In Georgia sipping a virgin pina' colada while the rest of the world is drunk

06 Dec 2011, 10:31 pm

There has also been some schools that frame low scoring kids for crimes they did not commit and they get sent to juvie just so the schools can raise their NCLB scores by eliminating the low scorers.

However this has not made into the media. I know of such a school and heard of others doing this.

You cannot leglislate morality, they will find a way around it.

Jojo


_________________
All art is a kind of confession, more or less oblique. All artists, if they are to survive, are forced, at last, to tell the whole story; to vomit the anguish up.
-James Baldwin


bergie
Toucan
Toucan

User avatar

Joined: 18 Mar 2011
Age: 45
Gender: Male
Posts: 290
Location: Phoenix, AZ

08 Dec 2011, 12:35 am

ruveyn wrote:
Tollorin wrote:
Except that the countries scoring first also have public education.


Good for them. In the U.S. public schools are a miserable failure. Placing the government in charge of any thing (in the U.S.) is a guarantee of failure.

ruveyn


Electing individuals to govern who view government as an inevitable failure is a self-fulfilling prophecy.