Courtesy of AJC:
By Jim Arnold
We’ve done it now. Eleven years we had to educate the public, to register our protests and do everything in our power to warn people what was coming, and we blew it. We knew the moment would eventually come and we hem-hawed, looked at the ground, kicked at the dirt with our shoes and failed to look the opposition in the eye and face them down. All of us saw this coming, but very few took a stand and now we – and our students – are paying the price. We could have been prophets but failed the test.
We allowed the proponents of NCLB to control the discussion from the beginning. They wrote the language, sent out the media notices and explanations, wrote the definitions of AYP, Highly Qualified and leaned heavily on the fact that none of us would dare protest anything to do with a name that implies we would be providing a high quality education for every single child in America. They were right. We chose not to speak out, not to fight against a system we knew from the beginning would set us all up for failure, and instead, in our best Dudley DoRight impersonations we set about to change the way we taught and measured and tested and graded and thought.
We knew from the outset that NCLB and its goal of 100 percent – every child proficient in every area as determined by a single test on a single day each year – was patently, blatantly and insidiously absurd, but we took no concerted action. We knew Adequate Yearly Progress was a sham, and we literally and figuratively rolled over and tried our best to meet whatever impossible goals they set for us and our students. We knew that Federal law in NCLB was a violation of Federal law in IDEA but we went along with the insanity of testing Students with Disabilities based on chronological age rather than by IEP.
We learned very quickly and much to our chagrin that some student scores – usually the lowest ones – were counted not once, not twice, but often as many as three times, but we went along to get along. All of us were aware that Highly Qualified, for all the high rhetoric that went along with it, only served to make certification as much of a barrier as humanly possible for Special Education teachers regardless of degree or experience. It seems the teachers we needed most were subjected to the greatest roadblocks to reaching the nirvana of HiQ certification.
We tried our best to play the game but the game was rigged from the start. When the AMO’s were low it was pretty easy for most schools. When the AMO’s went up and more and more schools were labeled “failing” we looked around in a panic for help. Surely nobody believed a school deserved the failing label because two or three kids in a subgroup didn’t pass a test? Yes they did. Yes they still do. We let them make the definitions and apply the labels, even when we realized the absurdity of it all.
We actually pretended to believe that it was important for us to make sure that every child was tested on those all important test days so none could escape the trauma we inflicted upon them. We even learned in some places to game the system and hold back those kids we feared might not pass the test or might raise those student numbers to create a subgroup in areas we really didn’t want to see a subgroup or, God help us, to cheat or to make sure that we could hold out two or three or four of “those kids” on test days so their poor scores wouldn’t have a negative effect.
Oh sure, some of you stuck your necks out and said something to the effect of “NCLB forced us to take a closer look at ourselves, and we are better off for that” in spite of the fact that it was our students that were suffering the consequences. What balderdash. What hubris. Our kids were the ones whose education was stilted by our submission to the belief that one test could effectively distill and determine the depth and extent of an entire year of a child’s education. They are the ones whose time was wasted by “academic pep rallies” and “test prep” and by the subtle and insidious ways we told them the test was “important” and put pressure on them to “do their best because our school is counting on you.”
They were the ones that did without art and music and chorus and drama because we increased the amount of time they spent in ELA and Math.
They were the ones that had time in their Social Studies and Science classes cut back more and more so schools could focus on the “really important areas” of ELA and Math. They were the ELL’s that couldn’t speak English but still had to take the test. Their teachers were the ones that were told “your grading of the children in your classes doesn’t count any more because standardization is more important to us that the individual grades you provide.” This told them in effect that their efforts at teaching were important but only if they taught using “this” methodology or “this” curriculum, then, when things started to go badly, they were the first to be blamed for the failure of public education. They were told to teach every child the same way with the same material but make sure to individualize while you’re at it. Hogwash.
After a couple of years of this insanity, the “NI” status began to take its toll. Someone somewhere invented the term “failing schools” and, unsurprisingly, the label stuck. Students were given the opportunity to transfer to more test-successful schools, but at a price. Schools that did not meet AYP standards, oddly enough, were often those with high minority populations and high poverty. Nobody seemed to notice the zip code effect that left predominantly white schools meeting AYP standards and minority schools caught by the “failing” label. Oh surely, we reasoned, our government would not want to put public education in a situation it could not win………..or would they?
I struggled with the rest of you as to why NCLB would go to such great lengths to make public education appear to be such a failure, to set up a system that would guarantee failure for practically every public school as we advanced toward that magical 100 percent level and provide no tangible rewards for success and such punitive actions for not meeting arbitrary goals. On top of all of that, I failed to recognize why our nation’s legislators so nimbly avoided even the discussion of reauthorization to change what everyone knew was a failed policy. One day it finally hit me.
They didn’t want to change the policy, because the policy was designed in theory and in fact not to aid education but to create an image of a failed public school system in order to further the implementation of vouchers and the diversion of public education funds to private schools.
I am not usually a conspiracy theory guy, but this was no theory. These were cold hard facts slapping me in the face. We failed in our obligations to protect our students from one of the most destructive educational policies since “separate but equal.” We did not educate the public on the myth and misdirection of Adequate Yearly Progress, and we allowed closet segregationists to direct the implementation of policies that we knew would result in our being the guys in the black hats responsible for “the failure of public education.”
Now we are paying the price. AYP is here to stay in one form or another, and the vast majority of our parents and public really believe the propaganda that it actually measures a school’s educational progress. If we try to convince them otherwise we are “making excuses.”
Vouchers – especially for private and charter schools exempt from the same restrictive, destructive policies we are forced to endure – are a part of every legislative session in almost every state. High stakes testing for all public education students is considered a necessary reality and teachers are leaving the profession in droves. Student test scores will soon determine teacher pay in some places even with no data to support the correlation. Students that do not graduate high school in four years are labeled as dropouts, even if they graduate in nine or 10 semesters.
Only first-time test takers are considered in the grading system for schools regardless of how many students ultimately pass the test. It will take years to undo the damage done to science, social studies, fine arts, foreign languages and other academic electives. Generations will not be enough to rid ourselves and our students of the testing mania neuroses created by our attempts to quantify the unquantifiable.
I hope the generation of teachers and administrators that follows has learned something from the failure of our generation to ward off those determined to destroy public education. We didn’t stand up to be counted, we didn’t stand in the schoolhouse door and tell them they couldn’t do that to our kids, and we didn’t educate the public about what a gigantic failure another one size fits all education policy would be. In the words of that great educator and philosopher Jimmy Buffet: “Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa.”
We have all been left behind.
There is no more that I can add to this amazing, and extremely honest portrayal of what has happened to public education in this country.
However I urge you to spread far and wide these very important words from Mr. Jim Arnold, who served as both a Principal and Superintendent of schools in Georgia, and is sadly very well educated on the terrible damage that No Child Left Behind has inflicted on our country, our education system, and our children.
(H/T to Alaska Dispatch.)
Pretty depressing all around. Seems like there is just nothing we can do. I am just hoping that my own children will be out of school by the time this all comes to the awful conclusion -- a decent public school education is no more.
ReplyDeleteIf I were in my 20s now, I would choose not to have children. There are just too many obstacles at this point. The Koch brothers and their ilk are working against anyone who is not part of the wealthy elite to have any kind of chance. They want us all running like little hamsters on the wheels of their making.
The president (W) who helped push through this misguided legislation would not be able to pass some of those tests himself. Members of his family benefited from this, though. His brother, Neal (another dim-bulb) was a partner in a software company that was part of this whole scam. If Jeb Bush decides to run for president, please remember his family ties.
ReplyDeleteSome of us have been yelling, every chance we get. You, for instance. But even from the beginning, the media, opinion makers, and pundits have called us all kinds of names. I figured out in 1967 that teaching every kid the same lesson, the same way, on the same day didn't work. That is the factory floor model of education which should have disappear decades ago, but we still push it. The last thing I did before I retired was send a general email to all the school district staff basically telling them the reading approach they were using was broken because it was this model. I got back many heartbreaking replies. KINDERGARTEN teachers should not be crying because their ELL students can't sound out words they don't understand and they have to go on, just piling up more concepts leaving the class further and further behind. All children have to read by the end of Kindergarten these days. Some children just plain aren't ready yet.
ReplyDeleteVouchers will finish off American public education. I've said it for year; I'll keep saying it. At the rate we are going, I may live to see no education for the lower middle class, poor, and those children expensive to education whatever the cause. I am confident this is not the outcome most Americans want, but I can't see how we are going to get the soapbox to get their attention.
A very sad and depressing editorial. We are in great danger of becoming a two class society. The teabaggers with their homeschooling and/or religious school education do not realize they are condemning their children to the lower class.
ReplyDeleteBill
How does the saying go? Right wingers insist that government doesn't work: elect them to office and they'll prove it.
ReplyDeleteGeorge W Bush really is the worst president this country ever had. Horribly, appallingly bad. The beginning of the end of American dominance and greatness.
Public education is not the public education of when I went to school. There are too many excuses made for children and the educational level has deteriorated because of this. I do not solely blame the teachers, but also blame the parents that don't realize that their children need academic help and fight teachers that are conscientious enough to talk to the parents about their child's failings. When a ten year old cannot tell me how many times 10 goes in to 70 or are reading at a third grade level, there is definitely a problem, but when the parent is made aware of the fact, they just brush it off and say that their child is doing better in other subjects.
ReplyDeleteFurthermore, there is no need to coddle students that do not speak English. I have personal experience in this subject. When I arrived in this country, I did not speak English and was put in a class that was only taught in English along with other non-English speaking children. We had a teacher that came one hour a day to immerse us in the English language even though the class was taught in English. Needless to say somehow I managed and thrived. As a matter of fact I started the class in second grade and when the year was over I skipped a grade and went on to fourth grade. There my grades were all A's with a couple of B's and by fifth grade I was in the honors program at school. Not only was I in the Honors program but when tested for the spelling bee, I got the highest grade in the school. So, coddling children because they do not speak English is not the answer. Special test for non-English speaking also not the answer. Children have to learn that things do not come easy in this world and if they want to succeed they have to work for it. All tests should be the same for everyone and if someone fails it, so be it. Someone is not doing their job if they cannot teach the child properly or are being cowed by parents.
The education system in this country should be made harder, not easier. Other countries are surpassing the U.S. in education because of our "political correctness." Get over it, if your team loses, then they lost. They do not get awards when they lose. That mindset is just hurting our children and does not teach them competition since they know they will still be awarded even if they lose. They have no incentive to try harder to better themselves. Intelligence is being brought down to the lowest denominator and children that should be thriving are not being challenged.
I totally agree with Mr. Arnold. NCLB was set up by Bush II to ensure that only the wealthy families would get a good education through private schooling while the rest of the kids are set up for failure, either directly through the testing where they are perceived as failures or through failure to achieve when it comes to college. Just another class warfare which the rich are winning.
ReplyDeleteI have been involved directly and indirectly with public education for over 20 years and I can tell you that this NCLB is creating a totally uneducated populace. It must stop - and it can be if enough people get behind the issue and fight for a good education. I doubt that most adults have no idea whatsoever as to how the subject matter has changed in schools, how science and social studies and art and PE and music are disappearing in schools nationwide. Home Ec and Shop were taken aware a long time ago much to the detriment of many students who could have excelled here and brought workable skills to the marketplace.
American education is ranked so low now in international standings that we should be ashamed - and it is due to NCLB and teaching to the damn test, not teaching kids to think and question their world, but to be able to give rote answers.
It is also an insult to the majority of dedicated teachers we have in this country, many of whom are leaving the profession because it no longer gives them the flexibility to teach to the child but only to the test.
Damn Bush and his minions - and shame on us for allowing this farce to continue.
Thank you for posting this. It is truth.
ReplyDeleteAnd ALEC has been successfully supplying the legislation to state legislators to further push the destruction of public education in favor of privatization. As have think tanks and foundations funday by the de Vos family, the Kochs and others.
http://www.talk2action.org/story/2011/4/20/232844/831
This is not a conspiracy theory. It is a well designed, long term plan to privatize education in the United States. The plan is now bearing fruit in Wisconsin, Michigan and doubtless many other states.
Firstly.
ReplyDeleteWhy would any one think the Republican Parry seriously wanted quality education for poor minorities who usually vote Democratic?
Two
Why would anyone think that a virtual illiterate, who flaunted his stupidity, like Duhbya,would come up with an educational policy that actually was intended to educate?
Three
Since Duhbya was/is a Republican why would we all not think that the plan put forward was intended to to achieve the exact opposite of what was claimed, since that pattern of duplicity was already well established by Duhbya as Gov.,and the Repocons by dogma?
Forth
You can't learn to think or reason if all you are doing is memorizing to pass a short answer test.
Answer the quesstio is the sky blue. Yes or No, requies littke knowledge and virtually no thought.
An essay question asking why the sky appears blue,requires a much greater amount of knowledge from several disciplines,combining those disparate bits of knowledge, from physiology, physics, atmospherics etc., and putting them together in a coherent and thought manner.
Making students do the former may just get them out of high school. Making students to the latter will get you physiologists, nuclear scientists and those who study the sky and beyond.
Amen, Gryff. NCLB is the main reason we chose to homeschool our two younger kids. They were on the top end of their classes--not geniuses, but really bright & LOVED learning. Over the course of their last 2 years in the public school system, we watched that love get crushed out of them by a system that only cared about getting the lower-performing kids up to "standard". My kids spent a fair amount of time each day as essentially teacher's aides. Now, I know that teaching something is a great way to reinforce learning it, but there comes a point when it is ridiculous. And basically NO science, dumbed-down history, social studies, etc.
ReplyDeleteI don't for one minute blame the teachers--I have 2 in my family & I see how hard they work. But how, as a country, will we EVER get ahead when our school system is bent on creating a generation of unthinking, unimaginative drones, all as alike as possible?
I read and read and never hear any one spelling out the steps people need to take to begin to address these issues.
ReplyDeleteWhere do we go? Who do we talk to? to begin to turn things around.
I have read a number of books, like "Parents who like to read, kids who don't" and they state that if you let kids read WHAT THEY WANT, they will learn to love reading, in their own time. I watched the process with my kids. I didn't push them at home to read the "non-fiction, poetry, historical selections" and my daughter got a 2 by the teacher in Reading for a number of years, while continually scoring in the 99% range on the WASL.
Is it because I am educated and TALK to her?? Is this what kids are REALLY missing? Engaged parents? People who value learning, not watching what Britney Spears is doing? And can we change human nature? The problem is we live in a culture that requires a level of reading and math just to manage in the world never before required in history....
At any rate I told her I don't care what her Reading score was...she read what she wanted, what interested her, which was mainly comics. She now reads 20 books a week at 12.
How does one teacher manage all the individual needs? The school my kids have been fortunate enough to attend see the differences in kids and are flexible so have provided a Challenge program for the highly motivated. But I have a friend whose granddaughter can't read well at all at 12.
There are studies in the UK that are worth reading about. Here is one my oldest daughter (17) sent me:
http://www.freedom-in-education.co.uk/newsletter/january04.htm
And, a note: please, please stop knocking all homeschoolers. There are a great number of us out here who are not teabaggers or religious nuts, but parents who want to give our kids the freedom to really LEARN, not regurgitate crap for one test a year. I was able to teach my own kids because my oldest is seriously handicapped & I am home to care for him--I can't be working outside the home. And they have had a decent education; not perfect by any means, but better overall than they'd have gotten in our local schools. They are great young adults (one started university this fall, one is a junior in HS), active in the community, voracious readers, caring, smart, capable people.
ReplyDeleteI feel a little like the "leave Brittany alooooone" guy, but really, there are some great progressive/liberal homeschoolers. In fact, to completely break the mold, the area my kids are probably least proficient in is American History. They know it, but not in the excruciating detail of the talibangelists/teapartiers. They have always been much more interested in world history & how events & civilizations impacted each other, than a narrow focus on just our country.
Did the Bushes do ANYTHING of value for your country. This is just so sad and will have a lasting legacy.
ReplyDeleteAnon@9:15:
ReplyDeleteI agree with you. I had a similar experience. English is not my primary language. My first grade teacher read Charlotte´s Web to our class. Halfway through the book I began to understand. And I loved it.
All three of my children graduated from very good public schools, so I have no direct experience with a bad one. All three are attending Tier One Universities. Tuition and fees for all three combined run in the six figures. That is for one, I say again, one year.
Higher education is already out of reach for the majority of Americans.
I don't knock home schooling, but it's a luxury I couldn't afford because I had to work outside the home. BUT I stayed on top of my kids, made sure they not only did their homework, but could retain and convey what they learned in practical ways.
ReplyDeleteI was and am a very involved parent, all my children go to public schools, two are in college, one is a junior. I refuse to send them to a charter school, because real education shouldn't be run by the rules of business administrators. They learned, but I worked with their teachers when they hit a wall, worked on finding a different approach to see what would work.
I've gone to every single parent teacher night, and with the exception of about two dozen regulars, the ONLY time we saw or heard from other parents, was when their child received a failing grade.
Excellent post, I thank you for bringing it to the forefront, because I would have never heard of it.
My experience echoes that of the commenter who came here from another country. If it weren't for some dedicated teachers who took the initiative, I would have failed miserably, through no fault of my own. I think this is what made me so gung ho on making sure my kids worked hard in school, and appreciated the value of learning and interacting with others of different cultures and religions.
So, people believe an anon commenter's sentiments about Trig and his welllbeing but refuse to believe "bots" and the SAME sentiments?????
ReplyDeleteThat is insane. There are several "bots" who actually have ties to this family, closer ties than any blogger could ever hope to have. Mediainsider/wendy waitress/anon comments are all written the exact same way, offering nothing of substance and no proof. All comments have an air of defensiveness as well, which doesn't bode well her her/him.
Watchingandwaiting, that's interesting considering that red states are growing in population, while union states are declining. As long as the youth ofAmerica continue to feel comforable about their lives and choices, I'd say life in America is good. People are going out to LA in droves, some stay, some retreat after a year or two. But Youth are feeling pretty confident.
ReplyDeleteUnion members are kept dumb and encouraged to vote democrat because that keeps their bosses rich. Union bosses are so much worse than CEOs.
The problem with the testing is not the test - it does a reasonable job of measuring whether students are meeting standards established for each grade level (e.g., be able to write a compare/contrast essay in 7th grade, a persuasive essay in 8th grade). Students are not just asked to "regurgitate" memorized answers any more than they do on any other test of knowledge.
ReplyDeleteThe problem with the test is (1) the high stakes element and (2) the cost.
One of the advantages for special ed kids (and I say this as a teacher with 20 years experience) has been that they suddenly mattered. It mattered that they were given an opportunity to learn along with gen ed kids. It mattered that they passed or at least made progress. They weren't just someone else's problem kids.
And how did the ADN report our scores this fall? Not, "Ten percent increase in graduation rate" but "Failing Schools".
ReplyDeleteOnce again, ADN has pandered to their corporate overlords and failed to do their job for the public.
Subscription cancelled.
8:27 hit the nail on the head. In the first place, the purpose of NCLB, pure and simple, was to greatly enrich the Bush family. The law should have been named No Bush Left Behind. As Amy Goodman put it, when you're banned from banking, why not bank on eduction instead?
ReplyDeletehttp://www.democracynow.org/2004/3/12/no_bush_left_behind_when_youre
http://www.projectcensored.org/top-stories/articles/12-bush-profiteers-collect-billions-from-no-child-left-behind/
Part 2, the long-range portion, of the plan was always to eliminate public education entirely. But not until after transforming it into a stinking carcass so putrid that all of the population, not just conservative catholics, would go along with it. What an irony: in their blind religious fervor, religious 'righties' are now setting the stage for tax-funded madrassas right here in the US – about which they will complain bitterly to the heavens once reality dawns on them. The political-religious scheming behind the scenes is one more area in which the Vatican is working hand-in-glove with the religious 'right'. No offense to any catholic anywhere, but the elimination or great weakening of our public school system will remove the last-remaining essential element of our meritocracy (open opportunity for all, including the poor), something without which our democracy will be unable to function.
This has been going on for a very long time. Since long before NCLB. It had it's roots back in the 70's, or before. NCLB is just the 'swift boating" of public education - after *they* determined that they could be blatant in all things that would bring down our way of life.
ReplyDelete"You have to reach 'em, before you can teach 'em." Does anyone even TRY anymore?
This is a disturbing read. I am horrified the results of this failed policy will only make some people feel more justified to demand vouchers for private schools. NCLB was a disaster it will take a long time to heal. Just like every other failed policy from the Bush years.
ReplyDelete8:29, so true! My kids were taught to read by a program that entirely avoided basic phonics until the teachers demanded the no progress program be eliminated. It was called Whole Language. I think the State of California got rid of the program or decide to combine the old and the new. It worked well for some kids, but many were thwarted. Some of the kids were reading when they started school and by mid-year had lost the skill and had to be retaught through a phonics-based program. It was a mess.
ReplyDeleteMy kids graduated near the top of their high school classes. The key? They read tons of books at home....whatever they wanted, whenever their homework was complete. So I have two very literate children who went to top universities (my daughter went to a private school on scholarship due to her being a National Merit Scholar,) and our son went to a Big Ten school also with lots of scholarships (also a Merit Scholar.) Then my daughter got a law degree and paid only for her books. If people want their kids in college, they need to pay attention to what they are doing in public school, make certain they have the best teachers, and make sure that the kids know school is their job. My kids worked summers, but during the school year were involved in band, choir, debate, drama...and a couple of sports. They learned to use their time wisely, and their reading habit served them well, as they are excellent writers and speakers. Be a parent..school is not a babysitter...school is a place where your kids will be taught lots of things. Embrace it...help out, volunteer in the classroom. Get to know the staff. All kids can succeed.
ReplyDelete10:42 Wow, I haven’t heard about Wendy Waitress in a long, long time! That must have hit a nerve! Grandma LuLu just can’t get over the fact that she is a grandma, looks like a grandma and refuses to believe she is a grandma. She is a totally self-unaware mall walker.
ReplyDeleteUnlike you poster I could care less about the personal info that comes out about this nut-job, delusional and incurious woman. But, I will work forever to see she doesn’t appear on the political scene in any role remotely like the one John McCain thrust on us.
Her speech yesterday was outrageous word salad with the same poorly organized talking points. Try taking some history, public policy and economics classes. It might get you out of your clueless funk and help you make sense of your life. Then feel entitled to let us know what you think. Until then: Get a life.
Well said, cckids @ 9:37. We are progressive/liberal homeschoolers, too. Thank you for speaking up.
ReplyDeleteMy personal educational philosophy is that if you teach a child how to learn, and teach him to love learning, that those skills will serve him well over a lifetime. I don't believe in the memorization and regurgitation of facts. Since that is diametrically opposed to NCLB, you can probably guess that I have never been a fan of the legislation or its implementation.
Wow. Jim Arnold's take on this is grim, but there is hope in the acknowledgement. I found it a call to action.
ReplyDeleteAs the mother of a speech disabled son, I can say that it has been hand-to-hand combat with NCLB. He is not and never will be a test taker, and the insistence on making him take tests based on his chronological age, is a sham. He is to graduate in 2012, but is more like a 15 yo than a senior. So we are planning that he will probably need two more years before he is ready for university studies. It means working at a job, taking a few classes and in general maturing.
Bravo, Jim Arnold and thank you Gryphen. I will pass this around.
One more round. Politically I always though No Child Left Behind was the program to prove that public education doesn't work.
ReplyDeleteOnce it was proved, all the easier to bring in privatization, a GOPer social and economic goal.
Every last one of the Tparty buffoons elected to Congress are hot to get money for privatized (church) schools.
Vote them OUT!
11:34 Sally, I love your post! It is uplifting and shows that we parents can make a difference! My daughter also is in law school and volunteers her little free time in the schools helping young kids learn to read.
ReplyDeleteMany years ago, there was a child in the school in my sister's town who had severe brain damage from birth. He was, and always would remain, at the cognitive level of a 9-month-old.
ReplyDeleteAccording to NCLB, if he was not reading and doing math on an 11th grade level when he was 16 years old, his teacher was a failure.
It is statistically impossible to achieve the goals set up by NCLB. Human beings can never achieve 100% proficiency because we do not come off of an assembly line. Come to think of it, even factories produce objects with imperfections.
After moving to Missouri, I became aware of the different types of home schooling offered by the different religious sects in the area. There are loads of Amish and Mennenites here as well as Pentecostals, Mormons, etc. I had no idea that these religions teach the kids their religious view of education. Graduate
ReplyDeletethese kids from their education and is considered a GED. The kids then go on to work thru the religious networks of jobs or sanctioned colleges.
It surprised me to see what I considered children working next to their parents in skilled labor. The families all network thru the church...and the money stays in the church community. I pray it is just because it is summer and the kids need to be kept busy. One of the Mennenite men told me when their daughter graduates from school achieving only an eighth grade education that she is expected to stay home and help her mother. I am sure this dear girl already helps her mother but really
there is no reaching for the stars for her.
No wonder George W. Bush visited the Amish and told them God speaks thru him..ignorance begets ignorance.
What is amazing is how hard educators have tried to meet these unrealistic expectations. It is testament to the character and ethics of the American Public School Educator. The same group who is being blamed and scapegoated by the politicians for all the failings of the public school system, in the past. These so called "failing schools" did not produce themselves. They are just a symptom of a crumbling societal infrastructure that has been infected with greed for the past 50 years.
ReplyDelete