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Another Perspective

No Education Silver Bullets

The Hispanic achievement gap can't simply be closed by more universal Pre-K or less immigration.

(Page 2 of 2)

The real problem with the achievement gap lies not with the lack of early childhood education or more-liberalized immigration policies. It mostly starts and ends with the woes that pervade America's traditional K-12 public schools. This includes the lack of high-quality academic instruction and atrocious management of teacher performance.

Three decades of research shows that the quality of teaching might be a more-important influence on student performance than socioeconomic background. Ninety percent of the lowest-achieving 3rd-graders in the Dallas school district passed the 7th grade math test after being taught by three consecutive highly-effective teachers, according to a 2003 study by researchers Sitha Babu and Robert Mendro.

But most American teachers aren't adequately competent to teach reading, math, history or science. Just 13 percent of education schools surveyed by the National Council on Teacher Quality had high quality math instruction programs. Thanks to state policies and the influence of the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers, school districts can't easily weed out laggard instructors.

More Pre-K classes aren't the solution. Vain attempts to end immigration also won't do the trick. The focus should be improving teacher quality; offering more-rigorous curricula; ending lifetime tenure; and offering alternatives such as charters and vouchers that make students, parents and teachers equal partners in education decision-making. These and other solutions can help all of America's children -- including Latinos -- succeed in school and in life.

Page:   12

About the Author

RiShawn Biddle the editor of Dropout Nation , is co-author of A Byte at the Apple: Rethinking Education Data for the Post-NCLB EraHe can be followed at Twitter.com/dropoutnation.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (15) | Leave a comment

Jeannine| 11.16.09 @ 8:02AM

Excellent article, Mr Biddle. Makes plenty of sense. Do you know of any research on how the Hispanics are doing in the private prep schools and Catholics schools?

Ken (Old Texican)| 11.16.09 @ 9:36AM

Wrong!
There are several "Silver Bullets"
1. Teach English exhaustively in the home/pre-k/elementary/and secondary schools.

2. Ebonics is just as limiting as Spanish as a primary language.

3. Break peer-pressure "ignorance coolness".

4. Hold out continually the hope of a meaningful future.

Stan Redmond| 11.16.09 @ 4:14PM

In otherwords. Stop voting for liberals that tolerate and promote the nonsense in public schools.

rssg| 11.16.09 @ 3:55PM

Gee, how about this idea (especially true in a bad recession with rising unemployment).........how about we accept fewer immigrants, period?

Since most immigrants coming here are Latino (legal and illegal), and most have grade school educations, simply reducing the mass immigration we're living with will lessen problems in public school as well as hospital emergency rooms (unfunded healthcare costs).

Nah, we can't do that, we must invite half the world to come here so we can "prove" we are no longer racist. That's the mentality of left and right.

Louis Jenkins| 11.16.09 @ 4:05PM

Old Texican:

I'll add another item-parents need to be involved in their child's education. I don't mean going to PTA or selling tickets to raise school money, I mean standing over them in the evenings and making sure that they do their homework, and do it correctly. I mean finding extra work at their level- heck, it's available in the library or on line. I mean making the child read an extra page or chapter in their reading assignment, or get another book to read. Throw some extra math problems at them. And you're spending time with the child too, like every good parent should. Behind every successful man there's a woman backing him up, same applies to a student, there's a parent standing over them. And don't forget, give a reward or treat when the child does well. If we don't instill a good work ethic in them when they're young what will they be like when adults?

Blacque Jacques Shellacque| 11.16.09 @ 7:23PM

I mean standing over them in the evenings and making sure that they do their homework, and do it correctly.

Slight problem with this - the parents have to have this knowledge also, especially subjects that go beyond the basics. Border-jumpers are rather unlikely to fall into this category.

Richard Baker| 11.16.09 @ 8:35PM

My wife's Father remarried, after her Mother died, and remarried a Korean lady, who had 4 kids, in Korea while he was there on a mission trip as a Methodist minister. The kids, the oldest was 12, came to Iowa on a Friday and Monday morning were in the local rural schools. No one, except Mom, spoke any English and the kids worked hard, learned the language, and all graduated from college. Not too many Korean Iowans then but they started from scratch. One is a stockbroker on Wall Street, one is an engineer with John Deere, one is a Penn State educated hospital adminstrator in Chicago, and the fourth runs a financial planning business and who received a volleyball scholarship at Drake. When I hear Americans say that they can't make it here, my first thought is about those step-kids and how lazy Americans are. There is NO Silver Bullet. Hard work and never giving up make up the success ticket.

Reformed Theologian| 11.17.09 @ 6:42PM

I'm married to a public high school teacher--town of about 10,000, West Texas, 90+% Hispanic school population. Local businesses hire and fire the high school's graduates like they are on a conveyor belt. Why? Because the graduates can't read simple English, can't do simple math, won't come to work on time or regularly, and don't see anything wrong with this. My wife tells me that the kids in school won't work , do assignments, or pay attention because they know they will eventally be moved along and given that diploma that says "Graduate of Highschool" but isn't worth the printing on the paper. The biggest problem with these students is apathy. The only time they get excited is when they are caught texting in class and have to give up their cellphone. Parents are equally apathetic and most think the highschool's job is to raise their child for them. One mother actually came to the school principal's office ranting hysterically about the fact that her daughter had recently gotten a tattoo. The assistant principal was somewhat nonplussed, and told her there was nothing the school could do about it. The mother said, "What do you mean? Aren't you supposed to take care of this kind of stuff?" This incident is typical and represents the thinking of most local parents.

Bad teachers, sitting on their duffs, locked in place because of tenure? Sure, there are a few, but the big problem isn't with the teachers, believe me.

Richard Baker| 11.17.09 @ 7:04PM

Reformed Theologian:
Was a math and science teacher here in Florida and I agree with your wife. The parents don't really give a hoot and expect someone else to solve their problems. I had a parent-teacher conference with a woman who was a local attorney. Her son was out of control, running around the room, and totally uninvolved in school. I told the Mother that her son was a troublemaker. She said, "How long have you known my child?" I responded, "long enough to know he's a troublemaker." She was incensed. Poor baby. She expected us to remake her kid for her. What an idiot she was and she went to Law School? I understand your wife's comment.

Lilkidmom| 11.18.09 @ 9:40AM

My son teaches first grade in a local elementary school which is in a distressed community. He is always trying new ways to reach his kids, but some are just so out of control that they make it impossible to give proper attention to those who want to learn. Most days, these few troublesome kids end up in the principal's office and rightly so. A teacher can only do so much and given the state of our culture in much of this country, with it's "me first" "give it to me NOW" mentality, it's a wonder they can keep their sanity. When I was a child, I can't imagine a FIRST GRADER doing some of the things my son has told me about! No wonder so many new teachers don't last five years and others take early retirement options. Many parents don't appreciate their child's access to a FREE education, so their children don't either. I am so tired of teachers always being blamed for the poor test scores and performance, when the real culprit is their students' lack of discipline, self control and respect for authority. These things should have been taught to the kids in their homes from the day they were brought home from the hospital, but sadly, some of the parents are lacking in these qualities as well, so how are the kids supposed to learn them? Answer: it falls on the teacher to instill these things in the kids, on top of being expected to fulfill their primary obligation of imparting the knowledge necessary for a successful adult life. We can't hold teachers primarily responsible for the state of our schools and the students' poor achievement test scores. The student's home life and upbringing also play a critical role in their attitude toward learning. This disaster has been a long time in the making and blaming teachers is the cowards way out.

champions online resources| 11.20.09 @ 8:55AM

In otherwords. Stop voting for liberals that tolerate and promote the nonsense in public schools.

Lucy| 12.29.09 @ 1:37AM

I recently came accross your blog and have been reading along. I thought I would leave my first comment. I dont know what to say except that I have enjoyed reading. Nice blog. I will keep visiting this blog very often.

Lucy

http://maternitymotherhood.net

Frank| 2.26.10 @ 7:47PM

The Black/White Academic Achievement Gap can be effectively addressed and narrowed in this decade! History teaches us that "men and nations behave wisely, when they have exhausted all other alternatives" (Abba Eban). Please preview our book "Between the Rhetoric and Reality" Lauriat Press; Simpkins&Simpkins;, 2009. It can be previewed on either "Amazon.Com, or borders".

www.us-bapeoutlet.com| 4.2.10 @ 10:46PM

www.us-bapeoutlet.com

poptropica | 4.9.10 @ 9:25PM

I’ll have a Poptropica full written walkthrough very soon, but in the meantime, here are some answers to some of the frequently asked questions about Mythology Island. Having trouble? Post a question in the comments and I’ll try to answer it!
Getting Hercules to Help You Poptropica

Hercules won’t help you until you have all five items from Zeus’ quest. Once you have the five items, bring them to Athena. Zeus will appear and steal them. The big jerk! Once this happens, talk to Athena and she will tell you that Hercules will help you. You’ll need to have the magic mirror from Aphrodite because Hercules doesn’t want to have to walk. He’s so lazy!
Getting the Hydra Scale poptropica

You can see how to do this in the videos, but basically you need to jump up when the Hydra is about to strike. He will rear one of his heads back to attack and his eyes will bulge out. poptropica
When this happens, jump up in the air and then try to land on top of his head. That head will get knocked out. When all five heads get knocked out, the Hydra will be asleep and you can click on him to get one of the scales. poptropica
I’ll have a full written walkthrough very soon, but in the meantime, here are some answers to some of the frequently asked questions about Mythology Island. Having trouble? Post a question in the comments and I’ll try to answer it!poptropica

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