**Long post but please read**
I want to begin by saying, yes, there are very bad teachers and teachers who are completely apathetic and ineffective. There are also administrators who are completely overwhelmed and unproductive. However...
I teach 5th grade at a public elementary school in Fontana, California. Just to give you a quick overview of our school:
89% of our students are Hispanic (46% of those being English Language Learners)
90% of our school participates in the "free/reduced lunch program" because of the parents economic status.
We also live in an area that is filled with meth, about 1/2 of our school come from the surrounding apartments, and we have a huge mobility (students moving) percentage.
MOST of our parents did not graduate high school.
Our district's budget is so negative that they recently bumped all class size to 33 to lay off teachers and concreted over 70% of the schools greenery to save on water/upkeep.
I bust my ass for my students. I come in before school for math intervention (not paid) and I also provide board games and such for the students performing at grade level so they don't have to stand outside on the concrete. I give standardized assessments, reassess based on need, and do all interventions possible. When I have students working far below grade level standards, I immediately start the SST process. Twice a year, I hold afterschool English Fluency trainings for parents.
That said, I am still ALWAYS running uphill considering that my class consists of the following:
- three resource students (special ed)
- one level one ELD student (doesn't speak English)
- two students in a foster home
- two kids with behavior modification plans
- two kids with ADHD w/out hyperactivity that are not medicated and/or getting behavior assistance because California recently cut ADHD from the Healthy Kids healthcare program
I live in an upper-middle class neighborhood in Redlands, CA where my kids will go to a school that is over 60% white and 7% English Language Learners. Do you really think, no matter how much time I spend or what techniques I use, that my school will perform as well on their state assessments as the students at my son's school?
Bush's No Child Left Behind really started all these "accountability" goals that put impossible requirements on schools when really the whole point was to push the way for more charter schools and private school vouchers. Ok, go to those charter/private schools and most of the time you will find out that they do not take the same standardized test that the state requires of public schools and they do not accept RSP students or students with behavior issues.
**Ok, rant off **
My school has made both its AYP and API and we got out of "program improvement" in our first year. I personally think this is due to all the teachers agreeing to take an additional 80 hours of unpaid training a year to get a "Reading First" grant that got the school seven achievement subs and we also have an awesome principal. However, I had a good friend at South Tamarind elementary who was a great teacher, but the administration at that school was a revolving door and she lost her job/tenure when the entire staff was replace because they were in program improvement 3.
My point is that socio-economic issues are very, very real and having politicians say that "
every kid should be proficient (a C student)" regardless of their environment, family life, and upbringing is an impossible goal. Yet, that is what is expected and schools/teachers/principals are being punished when that doesn't happen. Seriously think about it.