Cairo Association of Teachers - Newsletter



CAT Tracks for December 2, 2007
WHAT WORKS


From the Southern Illinoisan...


Want kids to learn? Expect it from them

GASTON, N.C. - "Who you is?"

That's how a student greeted me years ago in a Miami classroom. I waited to see how the teacher would respond to this insult against grammar, but she did the last thing I expected: She answered the question, as if it had been posed in English.

So it makes an impression on me, standing in a classroom here, when a student says "ain't" and a teacher promptly and gently corrects him. It is a small difference, but on the basis of many small differences, Gaston College Preparatory and KIPP Pride, a middle and high school side by side in a former peanut field, have carved out one big difference: They work.

According to the state, 83.9 percent of GCP students are performing at or above grade level in math, versus a state average of 66.4. In English, the numbers are 87 percent to 72. KIPP Pride posts similarly impressive stats.

This, by the way, is the latest installment in What Works, my series about programs that are tackling the challenges faced by black kids. GCP and KIPP Pride certainly qualify, and Caleb Dolan, principal of GCP, wants you to know it isn't because they use selective admission to cull the cream of the crop. As public charter schools, they take students on a first-come basis. Kids come here reading below grade level. Or not reading at all.

So what makes a difference is, well ... the differences: a longer school day and year; high expectations as a matter of policy; reintegration of sports, art, band, phys ed and other curricula that have disappeared from other schools; a culture of trust where students store their belongings in open lockers (if you are caught stealing, you must explain yourself to the entire school; Dolan says it's a potent deterrent); higher teacher pay; a lack of red tape.

"I worked for a good principal," says Dolan. "Strong disciplinarian, cared about the kids. She couldn't hire who was in her building. That decision was made in some central office. She couldn't get rid of the teacher who took naps. Versus, last year I fired my seventh-grade writing teacher because he didn't get it done in the classroom. There's too little time to waste with a bad teacher."

A few years ago Dolan and Tammi Sutton, principal of KIPP Pride, were teachers dangling "quite honestly, at the end of our rope," frustrated with the failings of ordinary schools. Dolan remembers working hard with one underachieving girl and seeing her blossom into "this dynamic student."

"Then she's pregnant by ninth grade." He takes such failures personally, he says.

So he was primed to listen when he got a call from Mike Feinberg: "You guys want to start a school?" Specifically, a KIPP school.

Feinberg and his partner, Dave Levin, had been where Dolan was - frustrated teachers. Says Levin, "We kept asking ourselves, what more could we do? And one thing led to another." In 1994, it lead to KIPP (the Knowledge Is Power Program), now a network of 57 free charter schools serving 14,000 kids across 17 states and Washington, D.C.

None of whom, presumably, could get away with saying "Who you is?" in front of a teacher. When that happens, it speaks eloquently to what that teacher sees in, and expects from, that child.

So consider Sherron Lynch, a seventh-grader who thought her mother was "crazy" when she enrolled her in GCP. "I thought it was a regular school, just longer time and mean teachers. But it was so different. Some teachers ... only reason they're teaching is so they can get some money. But at GCP, they care about the student's education and that really makes a difference." Lynch's reading scores have improved by 25 points in the last year.

That speaks eloquently, too.


From the Southern Illinoisan...


Teachers are key in academic success

GASTON, N.C. - As I wandered about looking lost, I chanced upon a teacher who volunteered to lead me where I needed to be. When I told her why I was here - a series of columns on What Works to change the culture of dysfunction that entraps too many black kids - she told me I had come to the right place: KIPP Gaston College Preparatory and KIPP Pride, two charter schools serving 600 kids here in farm country. She said she believes so much in what KIPP schools are doing - longer school day and year, higher expectations, more teacher freedom - that she came from Iowa to teach here.

In my last column, I told you about KIPP (the Knowledge Is Power Program), a network of 57 charter schools across the country that are reporting stellar results with their 14,000 mostly black and Hispanic students. Today I want to talk about the role teachers play in that, and all, academic success.

I'm not unmindful - a handful of readers brought this up - that parental involvement is also a key ingredient in that success. Some sorry parents never meet a child's teacher until graduation day - if then. But even the most involved parent is limited in his or her ability to make a difference when teacher quality is, in the words of GCP principal Caleb Dolan, "a crap shoot."

"I understand how parents feel," he said. "If my child gets this side of the hall, they're in great shape. If they get that side of the hall ..." He doesn't finish the sentence. He doesn't need to.

Having spent the last year studying educational success stories, I find myself increasingly convinced that much of what ails American schools can be traced to a bureaucracy that: (a) doesn't pay enough; (b) does too little to encourage and reward creativity; (c) doesn't give principals authority over who works in their schools; (d) makes it nearly impossible to fire bad teachers.

As Dolan put it, "I don't think you can pay a good teacher enough and I don't think you can fire a bad teacher fast enough."

"Teachers are generally very optimistic," said KIPP co-founder Dave Levin. "Unfortunately what happens is, you don't have a lot of examples in this country of systemic success and success at scale. You might have a good teacher there or a good teacher here, but you don't get enough concentration within a school or a district to have a cycle of success."

Spend enough time pushing boulders uphill, and it wears you out. Enthusiasm becomes indifference, energy burns out like candles, and success is defined down. Said Levin, "What you see in too many neighborhoods when people talk about schools, they want to talk about these tiny, incremental changes - which are necessary. But for individual kids, when you gain two or three points on a reading test, it doesn't necessarily change your life options. As their teachers, we can't just go blindly celebrating that without saying that we expect more."

No one becomes a teacher to get rich. You become a teacher because you want to give back, you want to shape future generations, you want to change the world. But the reality of our educational system and the grimy culture in which it operates is that that prime directive often winds up subordinate to the directives of a creativity-choking bureaucracy that seems less interested in educating disadvantaged kids than in warehousing them.

And then, here comes a program that's educating such kids so effectively a woman moves halfway across the country to be a part. The lesson could not be clearer.

You want to fix American education? Step one: empower principals to hire good teachers. Step two: require raised expectations.

Step three? Get out of the way.


Leonard Pitts Jr., winner of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for commentary, is a columnist for the Miami Herald. Readers may write to him via e-mail at lpitts@miamiherald.com.



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