Friday, May 27, 2011

If the model for No Child Left behind were used to fight cancer.

Courtesy of the Holland Sentinel:

Imagine Congress, in an effort to fight cancer, legislates the following:

Each year, all oncologists must report the status of their patients. Patients in remission are successes. Patients with active cancers are not. The percentage of patients in remission determines the doctor’s success rate.

Each year, an oncologist must bring into remission a higher percentage of patients than the year before. If he does, all is well and he may continue his practice. If he doesn’t, the government warns him. After three years of warnings, the state may take over his practice or place it under new management.

The goal, of course, is to eventually cure every patient. No patient will be left behind. If a doctor cannot meet this goal, he will lose his practice. It doesn’t matter that the doctor has done everything he could for the patient. It doesn’t matter that the doctor has followed every medical protocol. The only thing that matters is the patients’ remission rate.

Now mind you, a patient’s behavior cannot be considered by the government. A doctor is accountable to cure a patient with lung cancer even if the patient smoked for decades and smokes during treatment. If the patient doesn’t follow the doctor’s prescribed treatment, the doctor is still responsible.

Likewise, a patient’s condition at the onset of treatment is not considered. The doctor must cure a patient with an aggressive stage four cancer as readily as a patient whose cancer is in stage one. They all count the same.

Furthermore, the government is not concerned with the improvement of any one patient or group of patients. Instead, it tracks the remission rates by calendar year. Remission rates in 2010 define a period. An entirely new set of individuals in 2011 makes up another period. Although all the patients are different, the remission rate must increase.

As stated, a doctor must continually increase his remission rate. Increase is the measure of effectiveness. If Dr. Jones cures 30 percent of her patients one year and 33 percent the next, the government is satisfied. If Dr. Smith cures 90 percent one year but only 89 percent the next, a warning is issued.

This constant improvement is called adequate yearly progress, or AYP. Four years without improvement means government takeover of the failing practice, even if the doctor cures 98 percent of her patients every year.

Are you puzzled? If you’re a doctor, you’d be incensed, and rightfully so!

Now, substitute “schools” for “doctors,” “satisfactory achievement scores” for “remission,” and “students” for “patients.” Congratulations. You now understand America’s No Child Left Behind Act.

Not really much more to add to that, now is there?

15 comments:

  1. And why the concept of running this country like a business is so off-base.

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  2. Anonymous4:16 AM

    The only definitive way to better education is fix what broke it. The teachers union is a toxic entity that needs to be cleansed.

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  3. Anonymous4:23 AM

    what I noticed in my area re: NCLB - kids that were failing were encouraged to drop out of school so that the school could keep high rankings.

    The drop out rate sky-rocketed.

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  4. Gryphen, this may be your masterpiece!!!!!!!!!

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  5. Anonymous4:27 AM

    The NCLB is very similar to large corporation policy, GE, for example. All the employees are good employees giving 100%, but policy dictates that someone must be let go each year to maximize profits. Managers are asked to name the worst 10 people. It doesn't matter if they are excellent workers with excellent records. These people are then 'laid off' and eventually replaced with younger workers for a smaller paycheck.

    It's a suck policy, but more and more larger corporations are following it.

    Thank Goodness for Obama. He recognized that the NCLB act was a sucky one.

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  6. Anonymous4:28 AM

    Off topic but -


    Sarah Palin copies Pauline Hanson, "One Nation" - see Oz Mudflats, very interesting read.

    Sarah should have googled before she copied someone again.

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  7. Anonymous5:12 AM

    What a great way to look at this. I am so glad my kids are out of school, but they grew up with this policy and it was a complete sham. Both kids have had a horrible education here in the states, I am just so grateful that some of their education was abroad.

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  8. Anonymous5:15 AM

    I'm going to go paste this everywhere I can. Thanks, Gryphen.

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  9. This is an amazing analogy! Hopefully intelligent people like these will find ways and means to get our kids what they need! I have two kids in the school system, both have been in what are called "Challenge" programs, for highly motivated kids, but my oldest had 3 months in "regular" 6th grade.

    We were stupified...the requirements were so low, apparently so everyone could "pass." The kids were spelling words like "sun" and "happy." My youngest was spelling words like "inefficient" in 4th grade (and is now in 6th grade taking Algebra 1-8th grade level).

    We have now come to know a girl who is also in 6th grade and can't read. Her grandmother is getting her tutoring, but I think there are learning disabilities not being addressed. Kids should not be assessed on the same level and the teachers should not be expected to be responsible for increasing success when there are such diverse achievement levels.

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  10. Not sure if everyone has seen this yet but Oz Mudflats has a great post up about Sarah Palin and the odd (read: UNORIGINAL) similarities between Palin’s One Nation tour and racist Australian (sad to say) Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Party.

    Hint: they’re pretty much the same bigoted person – just on different continents. (Yes, Sarah, Australia is a continent also too. Just like North America – where the US is located.)

    http://ozmud.wordpress.com/2011/05/27/sarah-palin-steals-pauline-hanson%E2%80%99s-trademarked-party-name-%E2%80%9Cone-nation%E2%80%9D/#comment-2201

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  11. Anonymous7:35 AM

    Brilliant, Gryphen, simply brilliant!

    We are very glad President Obama wants this sham to stop, and you have clearly explained why.

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  12. Excellent analogy.

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  13. Anonymous8:32 AM

    Brilliant! Kids are not automobile parts. Kids come with baggage, with educated parents, with homeless parents, with breakfast, with no food for three days. With parents who read to and with them nightly, with Palin parents with nary a book in the house. Only George Bush would think that you could liken a school system to a corporation and measure results the same way. I wonder if Laura had doubts about this whole thing...she was an educator, and their daughters did well after they quit being party girls.

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  14. Anonymous10:18 AM

    4:16 am. Teachers' unions are not the problem. Back in the early twentieth century teachers in many areas could not be married. In the nineteenth century many teachers had to provide coal or wood to heat the schoolroom. Teachers have always been underpaid, under appreciated - at every level. Their days extend way beyond classroom hours. Why should people like the Hollywood "Kardashians" and the Alaska "Kardashians" rake in so much income when they give so little to our society and our culture?

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  15. You forgot one.

    All patients will be in remission by 2014 or Doctors are failures.

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