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June 23, 2008

Everybody's responsibility

Rudy_crew9805 How many times have you heard the proverb "It takes a village to raise a child"?

Lots, right?

Well, apparently the message still needs to get through. So Miami-Dade mayor Manny Diaz and superintendent Rudy Crew (shown here) brought it to the U.S. Conference of Mayors this weekend during a panel on improving graduation rates. (See the Miami Herald report here.)

That's right. They were telling civic leaders about the role they can play in helping kids succeed in school. Education - it's not just or schools.

''We can't get at these children - we can't get at their communities, we can't get at the derivative of their pain -- if we don't link our arms and create a much different architecture than we currently have,'' Crew said.

Continue reading "Everybody's responsibility" »

December 26, 2007

Comics curriculum

Dailyplanet2_3 When it comes to reading, some parents and teachers see Superman and Super Mario as the problem.

But a growing number of educators is turning to super heroes and graphic novels as a way to engage kids who don't seem to like reading, the NY Times reports today. Advocates say the students have fun while gaining needed skills.

"For kids who may be struggling and for kids who may be new to the English language, that visual sequence is a very powerful tool," said Michael Bitz, who founded the Comic Book Project as a graduate student and is now its director.

That message has resonated locally, too. Count Pasco County teacher Marla Spelman among the converts who has embraced comics, reasoning that "Reading is reading."

Doubters abound, though. They worry that it's just an opportunity to water down studies.

"If you're going to use comics in the classroom at all, which I have serious doubts about, it should be only as a motivational tool," Diane Ravitch, an education professor at New York University, told the NY Times.

(Image, superman.com)

December 10, 2007

GEDs and the Gandy Gap

Gandy Could more GEDs be one reason Hillsborough's graduation rate is a baffling 15 percentage points better than Pinellas's? Maybe. The state Department of Education includes GED diplomas when it calculates grad rates. And according to this year's stats, Hillsborough students earned GEDs at more than twice the rate of their counterparts across the Gandy.

Hillsborough's official state grad rate of 79.1 percent dips 2.8 percent when GEDs are excluded. Pinellas's official rate of 64.5 percent dips 1.1 percent.

Maybe Hillsborough is more aggressive than Pinellas in steering struggling students towards GED programs? That's pure speculation. But it's a safe bet Pinellas Superintendent Clayton Wilcox is taking a close look at all the possibilities (see Friday's St. Petersburg Times  story here) as he tries to get to the bottom of a gap that is counter-intuitive, given that Hillsborough has a greater percentage of at-risk kids.

While we're on the subject, grad-rate experts often slam Florida for "padding" its rates by including GEDs. So how much of a difference do GED's make? The state's official grad rate, announced Nov. 30 (see Times story here) was 72.4 percent. But take out GEDs and it falls to 70.1 percent. Not huge, maybe, but significant.

In some districts, especially some of the smaller, rural ones, the difference is  huge: GEDs account for nearly 12 percentage points in Glades, 18 in Hamilton and 33 in Liberty. To see DOE's district-by-district breakdown, click here here.

- Ron Matus, state education reporter; Times photo of the Gandy Bridge, 2006

November 16, 2007

Failure not an option

No, really.

 A Volusia County elementary school has decided to dump D and F grades, instead giving struggling students time to master the material they've had troubles with, the Daytona Beach News-Journal reports. Instead of being labeled failures, the kids will be marked "in progress" with an I on their report cards.

Once they become proficient, they'll get an A, B or C to replace the I.

The initiative, which could go countywide if successful, marks a shift from the philosophy that all children can learn to one that all children will learn, officials told the paper. Detailed information about what each student must do to improve should help parents and teachers more than a simple letter grade, principal Sandra Kaye reasoned.

The article didn't get into what happens to the kids who never seem to get ahead. But it raises an interesting set of questions. Is it realistic to assume that all children will earn a passing grade? Is it appropriate to tell kids that so long as they keep trying, they'll never fail? And, on a pragmatic level, how long can you keep a youngster who remains "in progress" in elementary school?

Let us know what you think.

May 14, 2007

Don't blame the FCAT for this one

Hsgrad_4(Times photo, 2006)

Contrary to concerns raised early in the Jeb era, the FCAT graduation policy has NOT resulted in higher high school dropout rates, says a report issued Friday by the Legislature's respected research arm. Not only has the grad rate gone up (slightly) since the policy went into effect in the 1999-2000 school year, but the percentage of students passing the 10th grade reading and math FCATs (which is what they must to do to get a standard diploma) has nearly doubled, according to the Office of Program Policy Analysis & Government Accountability.

OPPAGA analysts tracked students who entered 9th grade in the 1998-1999 school year - the year before the policy went into effect - as well as the cohorts for the next three years. The percentage of kids earning standard diplomas four years later went from 62.9 percent in 2002 to 65.0 percent in 2005. Meanwhile, while only 38 percent of the class of 2002 passed both tests, 66 percent of the class of 2005 did.

Says the report: "This improved performance may be due to improved instruction focused on meeting the Sunshine State Standards, more students retaking the tests, and/or schools providing additional remedial services. Districts reported providing additional remedial services including frequent monitoring, intensive tutoring, intensive remediation math and reading classes, and after-school assistance."

Could one possible translation of that be: The FCAT did some good?

- Ron Matus, state education reporter

 

April 23, 2007

Today's news

IS THAT A GUN IN YOUR BOOK BAG? Gun advocates have started the argument that if more Virginia Tech students were packing heat, the death count from last week's massacre might be lower. Others suggest that's a ludicrous thought. But it appears time for the debate on concealed weapons laws for colleges and universities. Only Utah allows it now.

LIFE LESSONS: To eighth graders, $7 an hour might seem like a lot of money. A new program in Hernando County teaches them how quickly that money is gone in the real world. The goal is to show the kids - especially those thinking about dropping out - the value of an education vs. that of the low pay they'd get in a low-end job.

MORE GREEN SCHOOLS: Pasco County also is building more environmentally sensitive schools (yesterday we told you about Pinellas County's effort), with one elementary going green when it opens in January and another on the books.

TABOO TATTOOS: Pasco teachers will have to meet a community standard for their visible tattoos and piercings, if the School Board adopts a proposed policy on professional appearance. Leaders in other districts say they wouldn't follow that lead - especially without negotiating with the teachers union.

STUDENT FUNDING TO RISE:
House and Senate budget makers agree in principle to increase the per-student funding level by $457, the Associated Press reports. The Orlando Sentinel reports that most of the new money will come from local property taxes.

STILL NOT ENOUGH: Students might get more funding, but is there enough money for teacher raises? Broward County is finding the answer to be "no" as it enters a new round of contract negotiations, the Sun-Sentinel reports. The union frets that after all this time, only a handful of its 37,000 teachers have surpassed the $100,000 pay level.

FROM THE OP-ED PAGES:
Florida needs an education commissioner who "does not burn incense and chant every time the FCAT is mentioned," the Palm Beach Post says.

April 10, 2007

Today's news

ART MATTERS: The Wimauma Academy does all it can to ensure its students, mostly the children of migrant farm workers, get exposed to things like classical music. And the kids love it.

NOT YOUR ORDINARY TEENS: These Hernando County high school students call themselves the Free Radicals. They like to think deep thoughts, and they want to make a difference.

THAT'S JUST MEAN: Reacting to a parent's complaint, the principal of East Lake High in Pinellas County bans the joke superlatives "worst hair" and "most likely to drop out of college." The students say: Chill.

EASING THE TRANSITION: Pasco County changes its summer school programs to help struggling fifth- and eighth-graders make it to the next level.

MAKE THEM HAVE DEGREES: Gov. Charlie Crist tells a group of pre-k advocates he will lobby lawmakers to require pre-k teachers to have four-year degrees, the Associated Press reports.

THAT SCHOOL IS GREEN: Sure, it cost more to build. But Palm Beach County officials figure they'll make the money back in five years with savings on energy and water, the Palm Beach Post reports. Plus, you get preferred parking for your hybrid.

LEARN A LANGUAGE WITHOUT TALKING: American Sign Language is a popular course in Broward County high schools, the Sun-Sentinel reports. To improve, the students help out in middle school programs for the deaf and hard of hearing.

FAMU UPDATE: University leaders say they'll ask Florida lawmakers not to hand over control of their engineering school to Florida State. Student leaders, meanwhile, do it, walking the Capitol to plead their case. Not everyone is convinced, the Tallahassee Democrat reports.

March 23, 2007

Make them pay

Florida lawmakers are not the only ones considering whether to send under-age dropouts to vocational school before letting them leave school. Politicians in England have the same idea in mind, according to the Guardian. What's more, the English leaders plan to fine the students who refuse to complete their education. The hardest core of those who disobey the attendance law could face criminal proceedings. Some criticize the idea as too punitive. But education secretary Alan Johnson says, "We need to ensure that we have the right carrots and sticks in place." Your thoughts?

February 08, 2007

Drop out, pay up

It’s impossible to measure the personal loss when a kid drops out of school. But there’s no question the economic impacts are huge, too. Taxpayers could save $45 billion every year if the nation’s drop-out rate were cut in half, according to a new report headed up by respected education economist Henry Levin.

The average public savings for each new graduate: $127,000. For black males, who are most at risk of dropping out, the number is $186,500.

What does that mean closer to home? The Alliance for Excellent Education figures that Florida's economy could have benefited from an additional $24.7 billion in wages over time if the dropouts from the state's class of 2006 had instead earned their diplomas.

The Sunshine State has long had one of the worst graduation rates in the country. Under former Gov. Jeb Bush, it crept up as high as 71.9 percent, but fell back to 71 percent last year.

The Southern Regional Education Board, which includes Florida, issues similar dire forecasts. "All states and local school systems should be engaging in a number of strategies that can help more students succeed," SREB President Dave Spence said.

Key Florida lawmakers are taking up the charge. Rep. David Simmons, who heads the House Committee on 21st Century Competitiveness, met late yesterday with Senate Education Pre-K-12 Committee chairman Don Gaetz to work out a plan to address the state's poor dropout rate.

"I proposed to Sen. Gaetz that we look at the concept of having every student that does fill out the declaration (to drop out) be mandatorily sent to a class that will include one year of vocational training," Simmons said. "I hope these students, after one year, if they get their vocational certificate, will be prepared to go out and do something in life."

Gaetz said he expected the House and Senate to have companion bills seeking to accomplish the same goals. The Senate version will focus on improving career and technical education, which he contends is a strong alternative to keep many underperforming kids in school. He ought to know, having created a successful career and technical institute program while superintendent of Okaloosa County.

"We have found in our experience that most of the dropouts are not dropping out because they can't do the work or because they don't have the intellectual ability to stay in school," Gaetz said. "Really, most of the students who dropped out of high school dropped out because they're bored out of their gourd."

- Ron Matus and Jeff Solochek, updated at 2:10 p.m.

About This Blog

Get inside the world of Florida education with Times staff writer Jeffrey S. Solochek and the rest of the Times education reporting team. We'll bring you up-to-date information about the latest education trends, fads and news, taking time to break down proposed laws and dig deep into local school issues.

The opinions expressed here belong to the bloggers, not the St. Petersburg Times.

E-mail Jeffrey S. Solochek: solochek@sptimes.com

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