Back in the 1960s Mississippi was a flashpoint for the burgeoning
Civil Rights Movement. As a student living in the north in those years my
consciousness on the issue was raised by the murder in Philadelphia,
Mississippi of three civil rights workers, Andrew Goodman, Michael Schwerner
and James Chaney, and by a song by popular folk singer Phil Ochs. Ochs song was
an angry and bitter anthem decrying the shameful civil rights record of the
state.
Here's
to the State of Mississippi
For underneath her borders, the devil draws no lines
If you drag her muddy river, nameless bodies you will find
Whoa the fat trees of the forest have hid a thousand crimes
The calender is lyin' when it reads the present time
Whoa, here's to the land you've torn out the heart of
Mississippi, find yourself another country to be part of
For underneath her borders, the devil draws no lines
If you drag her muddy river, nameless bodies you will find
Whoa the fat trees of the forest have hid a thousand crimes
The calender is lyin' when it reads the present time
Whoa, here's to the land you've torn out the heart of
Mississippi, find yourself another country to be part of
Enlightenment is still a long way off in Mississippi. Today,
I read in the Clarion-Ledger
that the “Great State of Mississippi” will, by law, retain 5,800 third graders
(15.8% of all Mississippi third graders) because of their performance on a
standardized reading test.
Apparently, the lawmakers in Mississippi have determined to
strike a blow against the dreaded scourge of “social promotion” by punishing
eight-year-olds for the sins of adults. What are the sins of adults that I
point to here? Well, the first and most obvious is to put faith in a one shot
test as a determinant of student reading ability. No test, no matter how well
vetted, designed and field tested, can stand up to that burden.
But there were many other sins committed by adults before
the students took the test. The most obvious one, of course, is that many of
the students who have failed this test are poor. Poverty takes a terrible toll
on a child’s ability to learn and poverty is the result of deliberate policies
that have been put in place by federal. state and local governments over the
last 100 years. As economist
Paul Krugman stated it recently,
The point is that
there is no excuse for fatalism as we contemplate the evils of poverty in
America. Shrugging your shoulders as you attribute it all to values is an act
of malign neglect. The poor don’t
need lectures on morality, they need more resources — which we can afford to
provide — and better economic opportunities, which we can also afford to
provide through everything from training and subsidies to higher minimum wages.
Beyond adult unwillingness to do anything substantive about
poverty, we also have the failure to provide these children with the resources
they need to be successful readers by the end of third grade. While the
Mississippi law exempts children who have been classified with learning
disabilities, it has clearly not provided non-classified children with the
resources they need to be successful.
What would these resources look like? Let’s start with high
quality pre-school programs. Let’s continue with high quality and readily
available health care services. Good health and good pre-schools have been
shown to predict better learning in schools. Failure to provide them is a
failure of adults.
Once the children are in school, schools need resources to
meet the needs of children who struggle to learn to read. In most schools this
will be between 10 and 20% of children, in high poverty locations the numbers
will be higher. These students need effective interventions, designed to meet
the individual and unique needs of the child. These interventions are costly;
they demand highly trained specialists, plenty of time and small class sizes.
Have the adults of Mississippi supported the cost of these interventions? Not hardly. According to a 2013 U.S Census Bureau Report, Mississippi’s per student spending on education is among the lowest in the country.
Have the adults of Mississippi supported the cost of these interventions? Not hardly. According to a 2013 U.S Census Bureau Report, Mississippi’s per student spending on education is among the lowest in the country.
And what do we know about retention as a method of
remediation? While anecdotal reports of
successful retention experiences exist, the overwhelming weight of the evidence
shows that retention is a failed policy. In their well-documented and very
useful book, 50 Myths and Lies That Threaten America’s Public Schools,
respected researchers David Berliner and Gene V. Glass say:
The decision to retain a student subsequently results in
that student having more negative outcomes in all areas of academic
achievement, and in social emotional areas of development such as peer
relationships, self-esteem, and classroom behavior.
Additionally, Berliner and Glass found that there is a greatly
increased likelihood of retained students dropping out of school, being
suspended and having high absenteeism. Not surprisingly, retention policies
impact a disproportionate number of poor and minority children.
As
I said in an earlier post, what the struggling readers in Mississippi and
everywhere else need is attention, not retention. Repeating a grade won’t help
most children, but providing a program that attends to the needs of struggling readers
will.
Any enlightened policy, informed by research and an
understanding of children and how they learn and the challenges that some
children face in learning to read, would look at what interventions the child
needs to become a reader. It takes time and it costs money, but it beats
retention and it has the potential for success. There are many fine, skilled
readers out there who did not read well by the end of third grade. Struggling
to read in third grade is not a death sentence unless adults, like those in Mississippi,
decide to make it so.
In a very real sense third graders who are being retained
because of test scores in Mississippi are the victims of what Krugman called malign neglect. And so I would add a
coda to Phil Ochs song of many years ago:
Here’s
to the child you’ve torn out the heart of,
Mississippi find yourself a better program to be part of.
Mississippi find yourself a better program to be part of.
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