Anonymous wrote:From what I saw, most of they key parts of Rhee's agenda were never even given a chance to get rolling - it was mired in obstructionism, and she was driven out.
We will never really know if her plan was good or bad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those third graders are another perfect illustration of how social promotion fails, especially when it's in combination with a weak curriculum and failures at every grade level below that.
When Rhee came in they threw out the old but did not create the new. We had standards, a list of things to teach - that was it. I was in shock as a new teacher, that was all you received, and no I did not get any textbooks, I bought my own as do many teachers still. I could never understand why the public didn't object to the fact that there was no curriculum It is only now with the new Common Core that we have a DC Curriculum, and they are being rolled out monthly. We are on the 3rd unit right now, we are waiting for the 4th right now. The DC CAS is not aligned to the standards, never was, and neither is the new PIA. It all sounds good, but those on the inside have never swallowed the Kool-Aid. It was all smoke and mirrors, yes she got rid of some lazy teachers but progress has been slim to non-existent due to the constant chaos, turmoil, continual overall of teachers and principals and new teachers every year (so you can never get the ball rolling), and constant roll out of new initiatives that have to be implemented NOW. As for IMPACT, if only you knew what we have had to "dog and pony show" over the years, to the detriment of students. IMPACT has gotten better, but if they'd listened to the experts they wouldn't have wasted time implementing all that nonsense (that they've now had to take out) in the first place. Do you really want a teacher making the kids demonstrate 5 learning styles in 30 minutes!!!
I agree. As a former dcps teacher, I could not believe what I saw. We had no library. We at times had no paper. We were given no textbooks. Handed standards days before we started And told to post our unit tests that met those standards and to find and create material along the way. We had an infestation of rats. We had police officers come to speak to our kids about trusting the police--one 5th grader said that same cop came to his house after his dad was mugged and told his family to move if he didn't like where he lived. We had kids selling drugs in the stairwells--when we tried to expel them, we were told it was a classroom issue. 80% of the 5th grade could not read at a proficient level, but passed the DC-CAS the year before. We had students who were expelled from the charter schools show up days before the CAS. Some of them were expelled for truancy. HR was a mess. The 5th graders had no recess. It was all really sad. All this, with being told, almost daily, that we could lose our jobs at any time. Thus, we could not just stop and go back to try to teach 1st grade reading to our students who needed the instruction so badly. Thus, we taught strategies for the test. We thought we were good teachers (at least trying to be) so we wanted to keep our jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't buy the "teaching to the test" BS. From everything I've seen about the DC-CAS, what's covered on it is nothing more than a watered-down subset of content that should be covered in a standard, grade-appropriate curriculum. It's stuff that would have been a piece of cake, with no studying for me, were it to be given back when I was in grade school. By and large, it's stuff that kids already should have learned.
Wouldn't be any need for cheating, or "teaching to the test" if DCPS had the right curriculum and materials in the first place. It's not the test that's the problem, it's the whole system that's the problem.
You're probably right, and most children who come to school with a fair background in literacy in DC do just fine on it. You do the math.
The Science test that I saw demonstrated eveything wrong about the way we teach science btw. Children are expected to know everything about everything (basically a lot of terminology) rather than demonstrate some understanding of the method. A written paper exam discussing a hypothetical situation would be far better than they are given. And if tests drive what happens in the classroom, it would drive teachers to do a shallow survey rather than deep investigations.
I find that to be complete bunk. How is it that we CAN assess proficiency and mastery of methods and facts for far more complex material, like professional licensure examinations for engineering, pharmacology or law which cover the majority of the content with multiple-choice questions? IF the students learned proper material in the first place, they should have no problem with tests. And, how would you ever get consistent assessments from written papers? Five different assessors could easily come up with five different assessments - and, you have tens of thousands of students to assess. The logistics of essay-based approaches are completely unworkable.
Seems to me these DCPS anti-test advocates are going in exactly the wrong direction. There are ways to develop and maintain sound item banks (DC-CAS probably does not have a robust enough approach), which enlists a variety of professionals (teachers not just from the DCPS system but from other schools and districts as well) as item bank writers and reviewers, a system that maintains the item bank to rotate the questions given and periodically retire questions, along with a system for assessing the questions and results themselves. Psychometricians have quite a few best practices on how to write and maintain good item banks, how to structure the questions (i.e. use of logical distractors), and even automated algorithms that can flag a question as either too misleading or too far out of the realm of what the student body would know (and that the item should be tossed and exam results adjusted) based on how they answer it. They even have algorithms for detecting cheating and other types of exam fraud. These DCPS anti-test advocates don't even talk about any of the more substantive aspects or details of the testing, they just whine about the mere fact of the exam, which to me suggests they are likely rank amateurs where it even comes to test development.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IF the students learned proper material in the first place, they should have no problem with tests. And, how would you ever get consistent assessments from written papers?
If the test was valid and reliable . . .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those third graders are another perfect illustration of how social promotion fails, especially when it's in combination with a weak curriculum and failures at every grade level below that.
When Rhee came in they threw out the old but did not create the new. We had standards, a list of things to teach - that was it. I was in shock as a new teacher, that was all you received, and no I did not get any textbooks, I bought my own as do many teachers still. I could never understand why the public didn't object to the fact that there was no curriculum It is only now with the new Common Core that we have a DC Curriculum, and they are being rolled out monthly. We are on the 3rd unit right now, we are waiting for the 4th right now. The DC CAS is not aligned to the standards, never was, and neither is the new PIA. It all sounds good, but those on the inside have never swallowed the Kool-Aid. It was all smoke and mirrors, yes she got rid of some lazy teachers but progress has been slim to non-existent due to the constant chaos, turmoil, continual overall of teachers and principals and new teachers every year (so you can never get the ball rolling), and constant roll out of new initiatives that have to be implemented NOW. As for IMPACT, if only you knew what we have had to "dog and pony show" over the years, to the detriment of students. IMPACT has gotten better, but if they'd listened to the experts they wouldn't have wasted time implementing all that nonsense (that they've now had to take out) in the first place. Do you really want a teacher making the kids demonstrate 5 learning styles in 30 minutes!!!
I agree. As a former dcps teacher, I could not believe what I saw. We had no library. We at times had no paper. We were given no textbooks. Handed standards days before we started And told to post our unit tests that met those standards and to find and create material along the way. We had an infestation of rats. We had police officers come to speak to our kids about trusting the police--one 5th grader said that same cop came to his house after his dad was mugged and told his family to move if he didn't like where he lived. We had kids selling drugs in the stairwells--when we tried to expel them, we were told it was a classroom issue. 80% of the 5th grade could not read at a proficient level, but passed the DC-CAS the year before. We had students who were expelled from the charter schools show up days before the CAS. Some of them were expelled for truancy. HR was a mess. The 5th graders had no recess. It was all really sad. All this, with being told, almost daily, that we could lose our jobs at any time. Thus, we could not just stop and go back to try to teach 1st grade reading to our students who needed the instruction so badly. Thus, we taught strategies for the test. We thought we were good teachers (at least trying to be) so we wanted to keep our jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't buy the "teaching to the test" BS. From everything I've seen about the DC-CAS, what's covered on it is nothing more than a watered-down subset of content that should be covered in a standard, grade-appropriate curriculum. It's stuff that would have been a piece of cake, with no studying for me, were it to be given back when I was in grade school. By and large, it's stuff that kids already should have learned.
Wouldn't be any need for cheating, or "teaching to the test" if DCPS had the right curriculum and materials in the first place. It's not the test that's the problem, it's the whole system that's the problem.
You're probably right, and most children who come to school with a fair background in literacy in DC do just fine on it. You do the math.
The Science test that I saw demonstrated eveything wrong about the way we teach science btw. Children are expected to know everything about everything (basically a lot of terminology) rather than demonstrate some understanding of the method. A written paper exam discussing a hypothetical situation would be far better than they are given. And if tests drive what happens in the classroom, it would drive teachers to do a shallow survey rather than deep investigations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those third graders are another perfect illustration of how social promotion fails, especially when it's in combination with a weak curriculum and failures at every grade level below that.
When Rhee came in they threw out the old but did not create the new. We had standards, a list of things to teach - that was it. I was in shock as a new teacher, that was all you received, and no I did not get any textbooks, I bought my own as do many teachers still. I could never understand why the public didn't object to the fact that there was no curriculum It is only now with the new Common Core that we have a DC Curriculum, and they are being rolled out monthly. We are on the 3rd unit right now, we are waiting for the 4th right now. The DC CAS is not aligned to the standards, never was, and neither is the new PIA. It all sounds good, but those on the inside have never swallowed the Kool-Aid. It was all smoke and mirrors, yes she got rid of some lazy teachers but progress has been slim to non-existent due to the constant chaos, turmoil, continual overall of teachers and principals and new teachers every year (so you can never get the ball rolling), and constant roll out of new initiatives that have to be implemented NOW. As for IMPACT, if only you knew what we have had to "dog and pony show" over the years, to the detriment of students. IMPACT has gotten better, but if they'd listened to the experts they wouldn't have wasted time implementing all that nonsense (that they've now had to take out) in the first place. Do you really want a teacher making the kids demonstrate 5 learning styles in 30 minutes!!!
Anonymous wrote:I don't buy the "teaching to the test" BS. From everything I've seen about the DC-CAS, what's covered on it is nothing more than a watered-down subset of content that should be covered in a standard, grade-appropriate curriculum. It's stuff that would have been a piece of cake, with no studying for me, were it to be given back when I was in grade school. By and large, it's stuff that kids already should have learned.
Wouldn't be any need for cheating, or "teaching to the test" if DCPS had the right curriculum and materials in the first place. It's not the test that's the problem, it's the whole system that's the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Those third graders are another perfect illustration of how social promotion fails, especially when it's in combination with a weak curriculum and failures at every grade level below that.