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I haven't read the article but is that school district much more uniform in terms of SES and race? |
Back in the day, when I was a child. we did not have the federal laws governing special education. Yes, there were classes for the kids who were the "R" word, as it was called then, but LD? No. Maybe, some reading specialists, but not a lot of that.I do not recall anyone going to "specialists" for additional help. In some places, there was wholesale "holding back." I had a cousin who was held back in second grade--she still cannot spell. I suspect she had a learning disability, but she is quite bright. So, yes, intensive help makes a difference. I do recall a friend (military family) who convinced a new middle school to let her son repeat seventh grade when they moved to a new school. She said they had tried this before but the school system would not let them do this. It was a good move--but, of course, did not have the social ramifications that might have been problematic in a school where everyone knew he was held back. I was a teacher who taught lots of struggling kids from poor homes. I taught first grade. Some kids blossom at different times in first grade. I taught a couple of kids who were repeaters and they still struggled. I'm sure that they would have qualified for LD, had it been available to them. Later, I taught in a DOD school and had a child who repeated first grade. He thrived. He was proud of having "done first grade before." He bragged about it. It was a very positive thing for him--he was quite immature and fit in well with the other kids. However, this is not the norm for repeaters and I think the family played a big part in making it positive. I kind of like the Mississippi "third grade" model. Grades one and two focus on the basic skills with math and reading. And, kids do sometimes learn in spurts. However, I do not think repeating more than one grade is a good idea, and I think, even in third, it should only be in situations where growth can be expected. For kids who have serious problems with learning--I'm not sure that repetition of a grade is good. They may need additional specialized help. I'm thinking of a child I taught who had serious dyslexia--he desperately wanted to read. Repetition would not have helped. Hopefully, we know a lot more about helping dyslexic kids today than we did then. But, FWIW, I always focused on phonics. It may not be the cure all that some think for dyslexic kids. |
| It'll be interesting in a few years when the reports come out showing how bad retaining kids is for students. I also have learned to not trust what schools report and or how they report things. Is something seems to good to be true, it is. I'm all for really hammering down on phonics and giving kids who struggle extra help early and often. I'm so jaded though. We'll see. |
| I'd like to see every state hire retired teachers or those who are on child rearing leave to tutor small groups of 3-4 kids 4 days a week after school. Any kid not at the 40% in AIMS should be mandated to stay after school for 75 minutes for explicit phonics, OG style extra instruction. Free. Once a kid catches up they can leave at dismissal. Train people well, pay the retired staff and others working the program $500 a week and you won't have trouble getting people. Kids w behavior issues don't get to attend. Once current group is caught up, you'll only need minimal help for the new class entering first grade. |
How do we “make” them stay? Parents will always come up with reasons to pull them out: sick, appointments, sports, etc. |