One nation, undereducated about itself

In E Pluribus Unum, the Bradley Foundation questions whether Americans are learning about the ideas that hold us together as a nation.

While most U.S. citizens told a Harris poll that there is a unique American identity, a majority said it’s weakening.

And “even more troubling is that younger Americans – on whom our continued national identity depends – are less likely than older Americans to believe in a unique national identity or in a unique American culture.” Indeed only 45 percent of 18-34 year old Americans believe that the U.S. Constitution should trump international law in instances where there is a conflict.

The report calls for “a renewed focus on the teaching of American history” in K-12 schools and college, as well as a campaign “to ensure immigrants learn English, understand democratic institutions, and participate fully in the American way of life.”

Opposing multilingual ballots and bilingual classes, the report warns of disunity: “Historical ignorance, civic neglect and social fragmentation might achieve what a foreign invader could not.”

The report is too pessimistic, writes David Broder in the Washington Post.

What disturbs the Bradley scholars is evidence that our generation is failing to educate the next one on the essentials of the American experiment. “On the 2006 National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) Civics Test,” the report notes, “the majority of eighth graders could not explain the purpose of the Declaration of Independence. Only 5 percent of seniors could accurately describe the way presidential power can be checked by Congress and the Supreme Court.”

Broder sees “plenty of vitality in the American system,” citing the record turn-out of young voters this year and the willingness of young people to volunteer in their communities.

Like Broder, I see a lot of vitality in America. Most Americans and most immigrants share a set of values: We govern ourselves, we speak as we please, we worship as we please, we tolerate those who make different choices.

I do wish students learned more civics and history.

Have a festive Fourth of July. I’m going to a friend’s ranch to watch him drive his Sherman tank over a couple of junker cars.

F is a Georgia pass

Georgia’s high-stakes tests for third, fifth and eighth graders are aren’t really high stakes, reports the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. The law says students will be retained if they can’t pass the third-grade reading test and the fifth- and eighth-grade reading and math tests in two tries. But nearly all are passed anyhow, even if they flunk or the retest or don’t bother to take it.

State Superintendent Kathy Cox defended schools’ use of the appeal process, which allows promotion if the principal, parent and teacher agree. When she worked on the bill as a state representative, she said, she believed it would be used mainly to identify and help struggling students — not to retain large numbers of them.

She said retention “should be a last resort.”

“I don’t think that just holding a kid back and putting them back through the same content, the same grade … with in many cases the same set of teachers, is necessarily in the best interest of the child,” Cox said. “They don’t necessarily need to repeat the entire year.”

Why not design an alternative program — different teaching strategies, different teachers — for students who have fallen behind?

Some 38 percent of Georgia’s eighth graders failed the math test on their first try.

Rich and rejected in Manhattan

Not a single student at Dalton, an elite Manhattan private school, was accepted at Harvard this year. For $31,200 in tuition a year, parents are peeved, reports the New York Post. Marymount, a private girls school also struck out on Harvard admissions.

While high SAT scores and grade point averages, extracurricular activities and privileges such as a $46,000 private guidance counselor were once expected to guarantee admission to Ivy League schools, that’s not the case anymore. And for private schoolers who have grown up with their eyes on the Ivies, the idea of getting a good education at a less prestigious school is little comfort.

Kevin Carey cheers the news that the the children of the super-rich may have to settle for Johns Hopkins, Wesleyan and Vanderbilt instead of the holy trinity of Harvard, Yale and Princeton.

. . . it’s unambiguously a good thing that it’s apparently getting harder for rich Manhattanites to push their children into Harvard by spending vast sums of money on expensive private schools, $46,000 private Ivy League admissions consultants (that’s not a typo), etc. etc. The reason (anecdotal, to be sure): all the criticism of the Ivies’ plutocracy-sustaining admissions policies and near-total lack of economic diversity seems to be paying off, at least a little.

Applications are up: This year’s graduating class is huge, moderate-income students think they can afford the Ivies due to new aid policies and the Internet has made it easy to send off multiple applications. Not surprisingly, the percentage of applicants accepted at elite colleges is down to new lows.

Swingers

Check out 10 cool swing tricks.

Carnivals!

The Carnival of Education is in full swing at An Aspiring Educator’s Blog.

Independence Day is the theme of this week’s Carnival of Homeschooling, hosted by Beverly.

Failure: B or D?

Last night, I edited op-ed columns by high school students participating in Mosaic, a summer journalism workshop at San Jose State run by an old friend and former colleague of mine. In one column, a girl from high-scoring Lynbrook High, which is 74 percent Asian-American and 22 percent white, described being asked by the only non-Asian student in calculus whether she had “Asian failed” or “white failed” the test. At Lynbrook, an Asian fail is a B; a white fail is a D.

In 2005, the Wall Street Journal wrote about white flight from Lynbrook and its sister school, Monte Vista High. Some whites don’t like the very competitive atmosphere, but more Asian families are trying to get their kids in.

Iowa may limit ‘timeouts’ in school

Iowa legislators may limit use of “timeout rooms” in schools, in response to a couple’s complaint “that their 8-year-old daughter was alone in timeout for more than three hours because she refused to finish a reading assignment,” reports the Des Moines Register.

“The problem that some of my colleagues have noted is an educationally inappropriate use of seclusion and restraint — ‘You were disrespectful; go into the timeout room,’ versus ‘You were disrespectful; how can we help you be more respectful?’ ” said Thomas Mayes, an attorney for the education department.

While three hours seems like an awfully long exclusion, what are teachers supposed to do about unruly children who aren’t in the mood to learn how to be respectful?

At home, short timeouts work best, writes a psychologist on Slate.

Timeout has nothing to do with justice, repentance, or authority. Rather, it follows a simple logic: Attention feeds a behavior, and a timeout is nothing more than a brief break from attention in any form — demands, threats, explanations, rewards, hugs … everything.

Via This Week in Education.

Are you smarter than an Indian 10th grader?

Are you smarter than an Indian 10th grader? Two Million Minutes has created the Third World Challenge, a shortened and simplified version of the test 10th graders in India must pass to gain admittance to 11th grade.

The test is here. The English questions are very easy for a native speaker. I had more trouble with the history, which had two questions about the date of UN declarations. Don’t know, don’t care. I didn’t try the other subjects, so others will have to report.

Obscenely stupid

British students can get points for writing obscenities on their state English exams, reports The Spectator.

One pupil who wrote ‘f*** off’ was given marks for accurate spelling and conveying a meaning successfully.

His paper was marked by Peter Buckroyd, a chief examiner … The chief examiner, who is responsible for standards in exams taken by 780,000 candidates and for training for 3,000 examiners, told The Times: “It would be wicked to give it zero, because it does show some very basic skills we are looking for – like conveying some meaning and some spelling.”

Via Flypaper.

Farmworkers’ kids go to college

Eight years ago, Granger High in Washington’s Yakima Valley was a typical high-poverty, low-performing school, writes Karin Chenoweth of Education Trust in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Only 20 percent of students met reading standards; only half graduated. Gangs were active; graffiti marred the campus. Nobody expected more from the children of farmworkers: 80 percent are Latino, 10 percent American Indian and 90 percent are poor. But a new principal, Richard Esparza, believed Granger’s students could do better.

More than 90 percent of the Class of 2008 — almost all of whom are low-income — graduated from high school on time. Another couple of students will be graduating this summer.

That’s not all — a whopping 90 percent of the 62 graduates are going on to some kind of post-secondary education. Thirty-seven percent are going directly to four-year colleges, 14 percent to technical schools and more than a third to two-year colleges.

Most Granger students start ninth grade with poor reading, writing, math and science skills, Chenoweth writes.

To tackle the students’ low reading skills, Granger uses a locally grown program that begins by providing students with very short passages posing an ethical dilemma, allowing students to grapple with serious topics while learning new vocabulary and gaining fluency. Eventually students graduate to longer passages and, after a while, serious literature that allows them to enter the life of the mind — “Huckleberry Finn,” “To Kill a Mockingbird” and “Their Eyes Were Watching God.” Even students who enter reading at fifth-grade level or below are meeting state reading standards by 10th grade.

Unlike at most schools, failure is not a final outcome. Students who fail quizzes and tests are given the opportunity to retake them after tutoring, allowing them to develop an academic work ethic.

That reminds me of Downtown College Prep, which I wrote about in Our School: Start where students are, even if it means teaching elementary skills in ninth grade. Treat failure as useful feedback: You need to work harder, go at it a different way, try, try again.

Chenoweth is the author of It’s Being Done: Academic Success in Unexpected Schools.




About

Once a Knight Ridder columnist, I'm now a freelance writer and author of a book about a charter school that prepares Hispanic students for college. You can order Our School: The Inspiring Story of Two Teachers, One Big Idea and the Charter School That Beat the Odds in hardcover or paperback.