[PovertyRaceWomen 1437] Re: Changing schoolsAndrea Wilder andreawilder at comcast.netSun Nov 25 20:39:04 EST 2007
Dana, Different school districts may have different issues--hence my remark about needing to come to agreement about school problems. I can't remember just where NCLB is in the legislative pipeline. A couple of weeks ago at a conference I had the "opportunity" to see some of those exercises that taught "teaching to the test." Stupidest pages I ever saw. The whole point about testing is missed--the items to be tested on should be embedded in a context of reading and writing. Most--many?--of the problems are associated with funding. There are court cases around this issue in different states. Of course this is all political--but there are those drop-outs. That shouldn't be happening. Andrea On Nov 25, 2007, at 3:52 PM, Dana Donohue wrote: > Hi Andre and Andrea. > Although I have never been a school teacher, I currently work on a > reading research project in several elementary schools in Atlanta. I > was curious about your statement, Andrea, that we still need to come > to an agreement about what the problems in the schools are. Excuse my > naivety, but is there still no consensus? Here are some of the major > problems that I have seen and have discussed with teachers. First (and > probably foremost), the focus on testing creates a lot of apprehension > and fear that if they (the classes and/or schools) perform poorly, > more of their funding will be taken away. Second, there appears to be > a lot of variability in the skills and expertise between both schools > and teachers. I'm guessing that this, too, may stem from the funding > issue. Lastly, I think that especially in the poorer areas, there > lacks that important bond between the schools and the parents. These > bonds may encourage children to stay engaged in the learning process. > I suppose that a good place to start to fix these problems would be a > push by educators to overhaul or do away with No Child Left Behind. Of > course, I'm not a teacher and so I am curious about what teachers > think about how to fix the myriad of issues that hinder children's > education. > > Dana > > > On 11/24/07, Andrea Wilder <andreawilder at comcast.net> wrote: Andre-- >> >> I understand what you are saying. I wrote what I did because I think >> there is enough experience and brain power on this list serv and >> others >> to light up a good-sized city. Where I live, school boards get >> elected. They are supposed to be the link between the school and us, >> and they are answerable to us--us meaning the people who elected them. >> Here, the "us" are the extremely knowledgeable members of this list >> serv. We know the consequences of school failure. This is useful >> knowledge, not only for the dropouts, but what may be behind the drop >> outs. I am convinced that groups of people with this knowledge, in >> our >> communities, can make a difference. I used to be a school teacher, >> too. We first must come to some agreements as to what the problems >> are, then prioritize and find out where to start. >> >> Andrea >> >> On Nov 24, 2007, at 12:25 PM, Andre Whitmore wrote: >> >> > Andrea >> > I am a former school teacher and I believe that the school system >> > in and of itself is the reason why so many students fail. The >> > schooling process is designed to ensure that students are socialized >> > to acquire an American cultural identity, which for many of the >> > students is an unrealistic goal for them. It has become increasing >> > difficult for students to envisionhow they can actively participate >> > and succeed in this culture. Jobs, occupations, and success are no >> > longer consistent with education. The educational requirements have >> > become too demanding and do not offer any guarantee for a job. Many >> > minority students have observed how their family members and people >> in >> > the community have sought education that leads to poverty still. The >> > schooling process should offer students the opportunity ability to >> > become socialized in their culture so that they can associate real >> > significance to their education. furthermore, American culture >> > singifies free market and free enterprise opportunities, but the >> > schooling process does not place emphasis on this aspect. Most >> public >> > schools teach students to become apoorly trained labor force that >> > remains dependent on the corporate structure. Simply put, students >> > will continue to resist public education until education in this >> > country receives a make-over. >> > Andre >> > ----- Original Message ---- >> > From: Andrea Wilder < andreawilder at comcast.net> >> > To: Women and Literacy Discussion List The Poverty Race >> > <povertyracewomen at nifl.gov> >> > Sent: Friday, November 23, 2007 10:29:06 PM >> > Subject: [PovertyRaceWomen 1429] Changing schools >> > >> > Hi everyone, >> > >> > I think it is really important to find out which types of students >> in >> > our local schools aren't doing well and to change local school >> behavior >> > so all students can succeed. >> > >> > Andrea >> > >> > ---------------------------------------------------- >> > National Institute for Literacy >> > Poverty, Race, Women and Literacy mailing list >> > PovertyRaceWomen at nifl.gov >> > To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to >> > http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/povertyracewomen >> > >> > >> > Be a better sports nut! Let your teams follow you with Yahoo Mobile. >> > Try it now.---------------------------------------------------- >> > National Institute for Literacy >> > Poverty, Race, Women and Literacy mailing list >> > PovertyRaceWomen at nifl.gov >> > To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to >> > http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/povertyracewomen >> ---------------------------------------------------- >> National Institute for Literacy >> Poverty, Race, Women and Literacy mailing list >> PovertyRaceWomen at nifl.gov >> To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to >> http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/povertyracewomen > ---------------------------------------------------- > National Institute for Literacy > Poverty, Race, Women and Literacy mailing list > PovertyRaceWomen at nifl.gov > To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to > http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/povertyracewomen -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: text/enriched Size: 6590 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://www.nifl.gov/pipermail/diversity/attachments/20071125/40afebac/attachment.bin
More information about the Diversity mailing list |