Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "Wilson honors for all - how has it worked?"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous] [b]You misrepresent the research.[/b] And your link is to a paper from 1987, which is now over thirty years old. An honest assessment of the research is that it shows that non-tracked programs hurt the lowest and highest performing students. This is not a surprise to anyone who has attended a school or taught at one.:) [/quote] Actually, I don't. And as I noted in my later post, I'm not convinced that honors for all is a good approach. What I did say, and the research shows, and you haven't responded to, is that tracking EVERY TIME IT'S BEEN STUDIED has been shown to mis-assign students (putting lower ability students in higher track classes and vice versa) in ways that mean wealthy, whiter kids end up higher tier classes much more often than their academic attainment alone would dictate. You didn't respond to my actual point at all. And I'm in no way misrepresenting the research, you're just responding to points that I didn't make with long excerpts from a tangentially related study. [/quote] Actually, you do. You stated "1. The research shows that tiered classes are largely ineffective and [sic] increasing student learning." That is what I responded to. If what you said were true, the Chicago study would have found that moving from tiered to non-tiered classes had no effort or a positive effect on student performance. Instead it found the opposite, as I described. And that is why it is directly related to the discussion, not "tangentially related". And the Chicago study is consistent with the recent literature on tracking. Parents and students should look at the report by the Brookings Institution titled "Tracking and Advanced Placement" (2016) - https://www.brookings.edu/research/tracking-and-advanced-placement/. The report summarizes the recent literature on tracking which in all but one case finds that tracking benefits low and high performing students, including black and hispanic students. Below I include some examples pulled directly from the paper where the [i]italics[/i] are direct quotes. [u]Harvard University Randomized Tracking Study in Kenya (2005) [/u] [i]Experiments in which students are randomly assigned to tracked and untracked settings are rare. In 2005, an experiment in Kenya could be conducted because schools were granted extra funds to hire first grade teachers.[5] More than a hundred schools (121) had only one first grade teacher, and the new money allowed the addition of a second teacher. The schools were randomly assigned to either a tracked or untracked condition. In the tracked schools, one of the classes was made up of higher achievers, the other of lower achievers. Students were placed in either the higher- or lower-achieving class based on whether they scored above or below the median for all students. Students in the untracked schools were assigned to the two classes randomly, creating classes heterogeneous in ability. The experiment ran for 18 months. [b]Both high- and low-achievers in the tracked schools gained more on achievement tests compared to students in the untracked schools.[/b] The benefit for students in higher-achieving classes was 0.19 standard deviations and for those in the lower-achieving classes,0.16 standard deviations.[/I] [u]Northwestern University and California Davis Study (2000)[/u] [i]David N. Figlio and Marianne E. Page (2000) also used an instrumental variable strategy to isolate the effects of tracking. They found that wealthier families consider whether a school tracks when making enrollment decisions. After controlling for those parental decisions, [b]Figlio and Page found that disadvantaged students benefitted from tracking, contradicting the notion that abolishing tracking promotes equity. As they put it, “…tracking programs are associated with test score gains for students in the bottom third of the initial test score distribution. We conclude that the move to end tracking may harm the very students it is intended to help.”[/b][/I] [u]California Berkeley and Santa Cruz Study (2014)[/u] [i]David Card and Laura Giuliano (2014) studied the effects of gifted classes in a large Eastern school district. The district had mandated that schools with even a single gifted student (most of whom were identified by IQ tests) must provide separate gifted classes in fourth and fifth grades, with open seats in these classes filled by high achievers—the school’s highest performers on the annual state assessment. The policy dramatically increased the proportion of disadvantaged students in the gifted classes to about 40 percent districtwide. [b]The researchers found significant positive effects for high achievers in the program, in particular for low-income black and Hispanic students. Card and Giuliano concluded, “Our findings suggest that a comprehensive tracking program that establishes a separate classroom in every school for the top-performing students could significantly boost the performance of the most talented students in even the poorest neighborhoods, at little or no cost to other students or the District’s budget.”[/b][/i] [u]Brookings Institution State-Level Tracking Study (2016)[/u] [i]States with larger percentages of tracked eighth graders produce larger percentages of high-scoring AP test takers. States where tracking is less prevalent tend to have a smaller proportion of high scorers....States with a larger percentage of kids scoring 3 or better on AP tests in 2013 had a larger percentage of kids in tracked classes four years earlier. That association occurs without any apparent increase in selectivity. The relationship of tracking with AP participation is indistinguishable from zero. [b]Moreover, the finding holds for black, Hispanic, and white subgroups. If eighth grade tracking operates in a manner discriminatory to blacks and Hispanics, it is not apparent here.[/b]...AP courses represent the end of the pipeline for academically gifted students. If we are serious about expanding opportunity, and serious about increasing the numbers of students of color who not only take AP courses but also score extraordinarily well on AP tests, policymakers need to take another look at strategies for nurturing academic talent in middle schools. [b]Long condemned by political opponents, tracking has been overlooked as a potential tool for promoting equity.[/b][/I] This is the type of research Principal Martin and Diversity Committee should have shared with parents and students so that they could be informed about the likely impact of "Honors for All". Instead they produced a propaganda FAQ devoid of any evidence that "Honors for All" would work at a unique school like Wilson where there are large differences in academic performance.[/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics