3) Academic Remediation and Enrichment
Astonishingly, there is no
comprehensive, consistently administered tutoring program at the
Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS)
to ensure that students struggling below grade level in reading and math are
given the help that they need to reach grade level performance. Failure properly to serve struggling students
has been manifested in both private and public efforts.
The Private Vendor Fiasco under No Child Left Behind
The Private Vendor Fiasco under No Child Left Behind
I have written in many places of
the favorable features of the No Child Left Behind law passed as a bipartisan
initiative in both houses of Congress in 2001, stressing objective testing that
in Minnesota meant a state-designed grade 9 assessment for writing and
Minnesota Comprehensive Assessments (MCAs) for students at grades 3-8 and 10
for reading, grades 3-8 and grade 11 for math; disaggregation of data according
to student demographic characteristics; objective
identification of schools that continually failed students in certain
demographic categories; and gradations
of punitive sanctions ultimately resulting in staff restructuring at schools
that failed students for five successive years.
But No Child Left Behind
regulation mandated private market interventions to help low-income,
low-achieving students rise to grade level in reading, math, and writing. What should have been a tutorial initiative
organized and delivered by the Minneapolis Public Schools and other locally
centralized school districts to confront their own failures fell to private
businesses, under the notion that competition to raise student performance
would achieve what the public school system had not.
This was a disastrous failure.
During an approximately
eight-year phase that began during the 2004-2005 academic year, numerous
commercial vendors competed to provide tutoring services to struggling students
as mandated by No Child Left Behind legislation. The private market for tutorial services was
fraught with corruption and achieved nothing substantial in behalf of
low-achieving students. Some vendors
promised students and their families gifts of computers and other items if they
signed up for their programs. All but a
very few commercial tutoring enterprises evidenced far more concern in
enrolling students for tutorial sessions costing typically between $30 and $75
an hour, as opposed to interest in student achievement.
Officials at the Minneapolis
Public Schools in the Office of Funded Programs attempted to coordinate the
private market effort by fifty or more vendors per year, but MPS staff rarely
visited the academic sessions run by the private companies, so that any
regulation pertained to invoice submissions and accounts payable. Much of payment rendered by MPS for these
private services was subsidized by the federal government via Title IX funding,
but the school district itself bore costs that subsidies did not cover, and a
great deal of staff time was invested in the monumentally unsuccessful private
market tutoring effort.
When Minnesota Education
Commissioner Brenda Cassellius and other officials at the Minnesota Department
of Education successfully gained a waiver from No Child Left Behind regulations
in the autumn of 2012, private tutoring activity waned. For two years beyond the approval of the
waiver, administrators under Superintendent Bernadeia Johnson’s direction at
MPS opted to maintain private tutoring activity, but thereafter this failed
experiment came to an end.
And officials of the Minneapolis
Public Schools have offered no viable, well-coordinated effort to address the
problems that federal officials vainly hoped would be solved by the private
market.
Failure to Design and Implement a Viable Tutoring Program at the Minneapolis Public Schools
Failure to Design and Implement a Viable Tutoring Program at the Minneapolis Public Schools
Tutoring efforts at the
Minneapolis Public Schools constitute an ineffective hodgepodge.
R. T. Rybak departed the
reformist nonprofit agency Generation Next before that organization delivered
on its promises to enroll a bevy of tutors to help struggling public school
students in Minnesota. This was after
officials at Generation Next committed two years of staff time to arrive at the
obvious conclusion that aggressive remedial instruction should be rendered to
ensure that all students are reading and performing mathematical operations at
level of school enrollment by grade three.
Students at K-5 and K-8
institutions in the Minneapolis Public Schools receive some help through the
Beacons after school program. But
academic assistance in Beacons is not high quality or properly measured for
effectiveness, and students spend as much after school time in recreational
pursuits as they do in striving to achieve academic proficiency.
Those wishing to sign up as
volunteers for the Minneapolis Public Schools may sign up under categories that
include Community Volunteers, Elementary Literacy Tutor Program, and Adult
Education Volunteers. Other programs
included on the MPS website for prospective volunteers that have relevance to
tutoring include Math Corps, Reading Corps, City of Lakes Americorps, and
VISTA. Not all volunteers render academic
instruction, and there has been no major effort to place a sufficient number of
tutors working to advance the academic prospects of all students needing
remedial instruction in all schools.
At schools formerly classified
as High Priority, efforts were made to assist struggling students for
designated periods of the regular school day, as well as after school; but these initiatives were nascent in
development, and overwhelmingly student performance has not reached the goal of
grade level performance.
Summer school and specialized
summer tutorial assistance programs at the Minneapolis Public Schools are
inadequate and feature notable teacher ineffectiveness. Further, leaders of the Minneapolis Federation
of Teachers have often voiced opposition to aggressive remedial efforts in
summer and after school programs.
This combination of private
enterprise and public school failure is stark, given that the problem is so
clear and the program for action so logically apparent.
We must do better, according to
a program with features given below:
Toward a Coordinated Effort at the Minneapolis Public Schools for Addressing the Needs of Students Struggling Below Grade Level in Reading and Mathematics
The Minnesota Department of
Education still formally abides by Minnesota State Academic Standards
legislated in 2004. The standards
establish the skill sets that students are to have at each grade level and
applies to all students. And indeed all
students should be expected to learn knowledge and skill sets given in
curriculum consistent with state standards.
But only 44% of MPS students
meet state standards in math, while a similar 43% of students meet state
standards for reading. This means that over 55% of students at MPS need
remedial instruction that is not currently being rendered in any comprehensive
way from school to school.
Staff in the Department of
Teaching and Learning should be dismissed and the department dismantled. Aimee Fearing’s employment should be
terminated and she should be replaced at the head of the Academic Division by a
college, university, or independent scholar with a Ph. D. in a key academic
discipline (e.g., mathematics, physics, history, English literature, music)
there needs. The program given above for
teacher training must be implemented, so that teachers have the requisite
subject area knowledge. Staff energy
must then be marshaled in skill remediation for academically struggling
students--- a majority of students in the Minneapolis Public Schools. There should be a clearly identified tutorial point
person for elementary school (grades K-5) students, a clearly designated person
for middle school (grades 6-8) students, and another for high school (grades
9-12) with responsibility for implementing a district-wide tutorial program.
In math during the K-5 years,
students need to progress through skill acquisition that includes pre-math
positional terms (up, down, under, over, and the like), time telling (analog
and digital), units of money, the four basic operations (addition, subtraction,
multiplication, and division), fractions, decimals, percentages, ratios,
proportions, data representation (graphs, charts, tables), and introductions to
geometry and algebra.
In reading during the K-5 years,
students need to progress through alphabet recognition, phonemic awareness,
vocabulary of ascending syllables and degrees of abstraction, sentence
construction and recognition, paragraph construction and comprehension (with
use and understanding of topic sentences), and reading of a variety of
fictional and nonfictional works of thematic variety and topical diversity,
allowing for an expanding and ever-richer vocabulary.
One hour a day should be set aside for students to work on enrichment activities connected to the skill level that each student is manifesting:
For students who have mastered grade level skills, this will mean working on advanced material that challenges students to solve intriguing math problems or read for the enhancement of literary appreciation or knowledge acquisition.
One hour a day should be set aside for students to work on enrichment activities connected to the skill level that each student is manifesting:
For students who have mastered grade level skills, this will mean working on advanced material that challenges students to solve intriguing math problems or read for the enhancement of literary appreciation or knowledge acquisition.
For
students who are lagging below grade level, this will mean working one on one
with a well-trained tutor until the necessary math and reading skills are
acquired. Work with a tutor should be
viewed as an opportunity to master important math skills and to read an array
of interesting and high quality fictional and nonfictional material.
Students should receive positive feedback for progress made; tutors should convey a sense of joy in
learning and delight in the opportunity to spend time with the young person.
Over time, most struggling
students will gain the basic skills that they need in the course of remediation
during the K-5 years. But enrichment
classes should be available at the middle school (grades 6-8) and high school
(grades 9-12 levels) also, so that students have both the chance to ascend to
academic challenges either for mastery at grade level or advancement from
already secured grade level position.
Enrichment sessions of both
types should be available after school also, with priority given to students
who are struggling below grade level; but
students evidencing grade level performance and
above should also be given after
school opportunities for knowledge and skill ascendance in the form of human
and material resources for research and specialized study of topics of driving
interest, and for training of the type needed for success on ACT and SAT exams.
Both in-school and after-school
programs for skill and knowledge enhancement should be administered in the
spirit of challenging students to know all that they can know and to become all
that they can be.
Once the program for academic
enrichment (advanced and remedial) is well integrated into academic culture at
the Minneapolis Public Schools, administrative staff and teachers at the
building level can take responsibility for implementation and improvement, with
successes and innovations shared across the district. Involvement of central office personnel will
be critical at the initial stages; over
time, though, well-trained teachers and tutors at the building level can
implement enrichment activities as a primarily site-based responsibility,
subject to oversight from central office personnel.
The
program will also require a great increase in the number of tutors and very
careful training of these tutors.
An aggressive program of volunteer solicitation should secure high quality talent among college students, workaday professionals, and academically astute and pedagogically adept parents and retirees.
An aggressive program of volunteer solicitation should secure high quality talent among college students, workaday professionals, and academically astute and pedagogically adept parents and retirees.
But expansion of professional staff hired for the express
purpose of tutoring will also be necessary.
Academic enrichment (advanced and remedial) should be a
budgetary priority of the Minneapolis Public Schools.
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