…….But I love how there are already people in the peanut gallery pre-judging what the School Board will or won’t do with the “closing
the achievement gap” task force’s recommendations.
Some think a 20 minute discussion is insufficient. I disagree.
I think 20 minutes is more than enough time to hear the recommendations
and consider the ideas--as many of these very same issues already consume hours
upon hours of meeting time in our district on a yearly basis. Having more meetings about meetings about
ideas will not solve one damn thing; most importantly-- more meetings will not
solve the severe problems in some dysfunctional areas of our community that
perpetuate the atmosphere that fosters the achievement gap’s existence.
Capiche?
the schools
will have marginal impact because it all starts with families and support at
the home. Absent that- results will be minimal and difficult to sustain given
current financial constraints.
Like the Geico commercial states emphatically-“Everybody
knows that!”
Be that as it may, however, I’m all about supporting creative
ideas to solve tough issues. In this
regard I’ve brought many ideas over the last few years, including following the
Roland Fryer/Geoffrey Canada HCZ model and paying students/parents for grades
and attendance, instituting an 8th grade gate for entry to HS-as
have Chicago Public Schools, New York Public Schools, and the entire state of
California as of 2014- (incentivizing at-risk students who want to play
football and basketball to make sufficient progress in middle school in order
to enjoy the privilege (not a right) to participate in sports in High School),creating boarding schools to separate at-risk students from their dysfunctionalhome lives, and paying good teachers that want to work in the 12 local schools
with the highest levels of social dysfunction a recurring, cumulative salary
differential to reduce staff turnover at such schools. I’ve brought other ideas as well-but most get
swatted aside as being too “radical.” Radical ideas?
Maybe. But this problem of social
apathy in some areas of our community is acute, and requires a mixed cocktail
of new targeted solutions for any chance of a cure.
As I have followed the deliberations of the task force group
locally and read their narrowing list of recommendations, I do feel like
several of the ideas are very worthwhile and deserve consideration/implementation. I especially like the high school students as
tutors idea (which is already happening in pockets of our district, by the
way). Let’s expand that!
I like the idea of mandating parental participation as well,
however I’m not sure how such a recommendation could be implemented or
enforced—but I’m all for it if it can be done! Perhaps we can intensely focus
promotion decisions based upon benchmarked standards in every grade, as we
currently do for promotion out of first grade.
This might curb the insidious practice of social promotion that occurs
frequently in our district today.
In truth-it does not matter what idea is brought forth; I’ll
support any and all effective and workable solutions that will help all
students be successful.
I’m just not overly optimistic that any one of these
currently proposed ideas will solve the
issues of social blight and apathy that consume large swaths of the
community. But I’m willing to try just
about anything to help make a dent in the problems.
As I read comments in the PNJ and from blogs, I see that
everyone and his brother have a list of things that “the board ought to be
doing!” Funny thing is we’re doing the
lion’s share of these things already. And
we will continue to do these things.
As I read these lists and ponder the good ideas and mentally
discard the ridiculous ones, one thing keeps coming to my mind, from my early
childhood in CCD in the Catholic Church—the first stanza of the serenity
prayer:
“God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot
change, Courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the
difference.”
My hope is that more people would come to know that prayer
and understand what that first stanza means, and have the courage to change
their own paradigm, developing a more highly internalized locus of control,
understanding that as human beings it is our choices, our actions, and our
efforts that shape our future in the vast majority of instances in America
today.
Refusing to assign blame to the responsible parties for
their inaction and apathy, while simultaneously blaming those well intentioned
folks who are trying to help students locally-- will not solve problems.
That liberal mindset
does not lend itself to finding real solutions that are sustainable over the
long term.
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