Friday, September 14, 2012

No Child Left Behind Appears to be Leaving Students In The Dust


NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND APPEARS TO BE
LEAVING STUDENTS IN THE DUST

H-22 UPDATE ON FLORIDA’S WAIVER TO THE NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND (NCLB) REQUIREMENTS AND ITS IMPACT ON ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS

Chair Perla Tabares Hantman explained her Good Cause item: Last year the Florida Department of Education (FLDOE) initiated rulemaking related to Florida's Accountability system in order to secure a waiver from the U.S. Department of Education (USDOE) from certain requirements under No Child Left Behind (NCLB) legislation. Some of these changes included modification to the manner English Language Learners (ELL) would be incorporated into the school grade calculations.

There were strong objections to this methodology across the state resulting in the State Board of Education (SBOE) directing that a Task Force be created to review the issue and take input from all stakeholders. Superintendent Carvalho was appointed to serve as a member of this group, which ultimately issued a number of recommendations. Though very few of these recommendations were accepted, the FLDOE transmitted a final waiver application to the USDOE.

To date the school district has not received notification as to whether the state has been granted a permanent waiver from NCLB. The Superintendent is advocating for accountability methodology which measures the academic progress of students and the effectiveness of schools, but one is fair, reasonable, and does not unnecessarily penalize students who have not had time to acquire academic linguistic proficiency.

Chair Perla Tabares Hantman stated she had two concerns; accountability being fair, reasonable and equitable and the state has not announced if Florida's waiver has been approved nor have they shared what the final requirements will be for students.

Vice Chair Dr. Lawrence S. Feldman and Dr. Martin S. Karp stated his concerns as to when more information will be provided and to when the concerns will be addressed by the FLDOE.

Superintendent Alberto Carvalho spoke to this item. "There has been no confirmation or denial of the waiver as of yet." However, he considers this delay a positive thing.  The Superintendent acknowledges that Miami-Dade County has a disproportionate number of ELL students as opposed to other school districts and under the new calculations we would not, therefore the data may show MDCPS ELL students are performing better than other ELL students in other counties.  The Superintendent referenced a Miami Herald news article, "Judge rules against Florida policy linking tuition to parents' immigration status" in an effort to point out, "Sometimes Government passes rules and laws that are not legal and it is not until someone questions it that it comes to the light . . . and it is our responsiblity that we make sure our students count and are counted." 

Board Member Renier Diaz de la Portilla asks the question. "Are we pursuing a federal or state remedy to this and is there a legal remedy?" 

Superintendent Alberto Carvalho responded to Board Member Renier Diaz de la Portilla. " We accepted and participated in the Task Force with the idea that our recommendations would be heard, but a vast majority of the recommendations were ignored. Our first approach was to lobby the state for a quick fix and that state blamed the federal government. We were all surprised when Mr. José Rico published a letter in the Herald where he basically complimented the State of Florida for its role on accountability under the erroneous assumption that Florida had availed itself of all of the opportunities under the waiver to provide for multiple assessment for children who are still in the process of learning English.  [Rico's letter brought to the forefront that]Florida did not do that so that shifted the spotlight from the federal government back to the state.  That gave us an opportunity to call Washington, D.C. and say 'we thank you so much for your position but you are quite incorrect in your assumption that the state did everything that you thought the state could have done for these kids.' So now we have shifted our attention from the federal government back to Tallahassee again and we are engaging congressional leaders, the USDOE and the associations that represent the interest of these students. When we first started this conversation I mentioned that litigation could not be excluded from the conversation. After all, litigation is the last resort after we feel that we have exhausted all rational and reasonable conversation.  We are getting to that point. We may bring to the board a recommendation for legal recourse."

Board Member Renier Diaz de la Portilla asks an additional question. "What will be the time table for a remedy for this problem as in the impact to our school district if we do not resolve it?

Superintendent Alberto Carvalho responded to Board Member Renier Diaz de la Portilla. "One of the challenges this past year was a significant delay to the accountability results.  We remember there were some false starts and unfortunately some of the accountability results that were released had to be changed and changed again.  We always embraced the position that the department was overzealous in advancing the implementation of policy beyond a time line that was acceptable to any of us. There were 18 different changes over a one year period of time, some changes being announced to teachers and principals well into ¾ of the school year.  The timeline is one that certainly needs to be resolved prior to the administration of the FCAT. Parents and community members need to be advised well in advance that the game and the rules have changed yet again. "

Board Member Renier Diaz de la Portilla spoke to this issue. "This is an urgent issue we all know at the pace the federal government moves at, so I am a little bit concerned.  I would love for this item to come back next month. I think we need to get aggressive with this issue.

Superintendent Alberto Carvalho responded to Board Member Renier Diaz de la Portilla. "This will help tackle issue dealing with Students with disabilities; there are elements in the accountability system that are equally punitive to students with disabilities. I have visited schools and I know that the schools are not dumping grounds for these students, and with this new system schools will be “F” schools first year and second year and the state will be threatening with consequences while they know that there is no better setting for these students. We will tackle both issues because they both value our full attention."

Board Member Ms. Raquel A. Regalado spoke on the issue. " I am glad you, Mr. Superintendent added that last piece and I hope that we will not wait on litigation expecting other school districts to join because ELL does not effect other school districts and I would like for us to move swiftly and take the lead on that.  There is a lot of concerns on the special needs front and what is being requested to both groups is egregious at best."

As a high school English teacher, I see on a daily basis the difficulties students’ face that are natural born citizens in navigating the English language and passing standardized test. Therefore, to request an expedited result for English Language Learners and Students with Disabilities, I feel is the equivalent of putting them in the ring with their hands tied behind their back.  I am a firm believer that every child can learn and be inspired, however, it must be done at a pace corresponding to his or her level.

H-12 Large High Schools

School districts throughout the United States responded to large student influxes by building increasingly larger schools. The larger schools lead to larger classroom sizes and higher teacher to student ratios.  A concerned parent spoke out at the meeting and pointed out that larger schools are not beneficial to students and the district acknowledges this through one of their programs, IPrep, which is run by the superintendent and has small classroom sizes, with a small teacher to student ratio.

School Board Member Dr. Marta Perez spoke to the issue. "The research is substantial that high schools better serve our students if they are small. The West Ed. Policy brief, Are Smaller Schools Better? states, "The poorer the school the smaller the school should be." Nationally high schools tend to be larger but the significance is larger in high school.  Out of the 51 schools [in the nation] larger than 2,500 students, Miami Dade has 16. In addition, we have three of the largest high schools in the nation: Ferguson, South Dade and G. Holmes Braddock.  Students in affluent areas tend to attend schools that are smaller.  Furthermore, administratively [in larger schools] the ratio is 1 administrator to 744 students. All this issue is saying is be mindful of the larger schools and recognize the needs and problems in these lager schools."

Vice Chair Dr. Lawrence S. Feldman spoke on the issue, "The superintendent should speak to the constituents regarding schools that are 40, 50, 60 years old regarding what he is going to do with those schools that have children with special needs.  Do all our schools in poverty have the same access to technology?  Your asking the superintendent to address the needs of large high schools as a part of our strategic plan before he takes care of our poor kids, our [dilapidated] buildings . . . to tell him to accentuate one item is not fair to all the other students who are waiting for their bond money to come through, but rather say to the superintendent 'as you go through your bond referendum be mindful of what each community needs.'"

The motion died.

Teaching at a "large school", I definitely feel the impact of having a large quantity of students in my AP English course.  I recently found out having the words Advanced Placement before the word English nullifies the phrase "small class size".  There are currently 37 bright minds in my course, but 37 nonetheless.  It is difficult to be one teacher assisting 25 students but in an ever fluctuating class such as my AP course due to the school need to meet the size demands, causes a problem and lessens the quality of education students receive. In my opinion, School Board Member Dr. Marta Perez is correct, a large school may have an impact on the quality of education a student may receive.  Smaller schools allot for more technology to be utilized, one on one attention and improve the overall class dynamic.

A-1 Extended School Day

According to statue, the school day was extended in 10 schools. Superintendent Alaberto Carvalho addressed the extended school day, which has drummed up much discussion amongst teachers and parents.  "The students are receiving transportation through the district, an additional hour of instruction that is weaved into the school day, snacks throughout the day, and elementary students are receiving additional assistance in math and reading. The remediation piece of this statue is through customized curriculum tailored to the individual needs of the students. This statue is bringing back the electives . . . Dr. Holloway reminds me 'that students need an incentive to show up to school.' So arts, band, and music programs are kept and expanded in some cases at these schools.  I also want to thank the United Teachers of Dade who negotiated this matter."

Hopefully this is true because across the district the elective course offerings are diminishing and being replaced with intensive courses for remediation.  I acquiesce in regards to Dr. Holloway's statement, 'that students need an incentive to show up to school.' I would love to replace the word incentive, which has to me, a negative connotation. In using this word I feel we are treating our students like they are animals that need to be trained.  We should replace the word incentive with the word passion. Students need “passion” to attend school.  The arts and technical course offerings offered to some students who find the core curriculum to be tedious at best a reminder that reading, writing, math, science, etc. . . are at the corner stone of the things they are passionate about.  For example if you love drama class, then the drama teacher has an opportunity to show a student how English is tied to drama through diction, tone and inflection.  If you read any great work of literature the author is a master of these rhetorical devices and create a dramatic piece in the readers mind. Therefore, it is my strong hope the extended day is not another moment for remediation but a true teachable moment expanding the spectrum of education.

Reduction of Suspension or Soft on Student Behavior?

Superintendent Carvalho mentioned three or four months ago the school board addressed safety in schools through reducing violent acts as well as the need for a reduction of the number of indoor and outdoor suspension days.  At the September 5th school board meeting, Dr. Nikolai Vitti, Chief Academic Officer of the Education Transformation Office (ETO) provided data on suspension rates.  "Four years ago, 49,000 students received indoor suspension, last year the number decreased to 41,000. There were 37,000 outdoor suspension four years ago and the number has not decreased to date.  Dr. Vitti mentioned [in the last four years] there was a "substantial decrease at Educational Transformation Schools due to Saturday School detention options and Positive Behavior Support (PBS), which offers incentives for positive behavior."  Therefore, Superintendent Carvalho asked Valtena Brown, Chief Operating Officer, to lead a task force that would bring about solutions to decrease indoor and outdoor suspension days district wide.

As a result of the task force there were some recommendations:

1.     Outdoor suspension for level 1 or 2 violations will be forbidden except upon review of the region.
2.     Students that have been habitually suspended and/or have 10 or more suspensions will not be suspended further without region office approval.

Superintendent Alberto Carvalho addressed the issue by stating, “I do not want anyone to mistake this action as us going soft on student behavior or me wanting principals to overlook student behavior, we are not doing that. We are finding different ways to discipline students without depriving them of the education they deserve.  Especially in schools where they need it more."

Valtena Brown added to the topic by mentioning the use of community partners as an avenue or resource where students can go.  In addition, each school is required to submit an alternative to suspension plan and in that plan they must make sure they reach out to community members to identify service that are unique to their population so parents see them as a viable option. Also, training is being provided to administrators so they can provide alternative disciplinary actions to students.

Artie Leichner, First Vice President of UTD, spoke on this issue.  "The problem with SCSI is that it became a dumping ground.  What do you do when you give students detention slips or request them to attend Saturday School and the child does not attend? What do you do then?  Also, not soliciting teachers and bringing them into the issue is a wasted opportunity."

Superintendent Alberto Carvalho further addressed the issue by stating, " . . .parents need to play a significant role in this process for it to be a success."

I concur; the process for indoor and outdoor suspensions is ridiculous and futile to the success of students.  Students return from 3-day indoor suspensions or 10-day outdoor suspensions in need of make-up work they do not understand, with the same behavioral problem and no better for the process. However, I also share Artie Leichner's concerns that the Task Force's recommendations have a great deal of gaps in them, that may end up being gapping holes if they are not filled soon.  As a teacher discipline issues is the nemesis to learning, and there needs to be clear strategies in place that will work every time with every student. Discipline cannot start in the schools if there is not support at home.