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History as a Weapon

American textbooks are turning our country’s past on our future
By Joe Enge
 
Liberal historical myths and misrepresentations are hobbling America to face the dangers of the 21st century. The relationship of the past in framing perspectives of the present to determine the future has never been clearer. At the same time, public schools in our country continue to turn students off to history as a subject, leave them with erroneous and negative views of their rich heritage, and unprepared for the requisite critical thinking skills needed as citizens to defend against clear and present dangers.

The heart of the problem is history textbooks. They are a product of having government in the role as providers of education. It has created an unnecessary, artificial, ideological game in textbook publishing and selection. We should recognize conservatives not only face an uphill battle to have legitimate concerns addressed during the selection process of history textbooks in public schools, but should question the fundamental legitimacy of the flawed assumption that government approval and purchase of textbooks will produce a quality product.

Centralization and coercion are the hallmarks of liberals, necessary to advance their agenda at taxpayers’ expense, while choice and voluntary interactions are their bane and undoing. We need to end the utilization of history textbooks as a vehicle for proselytizing students by propagating the slanted views of what Ann Coulter fittingly and accurately referred to as the Church of Liberalism.

American public secondary education at times resembles Joseph Heller’s Catch-22 world pervaded by circular, nonsensical bureaucratic logic of irrationality. It should not then come as a surprise that history textbooks are reflective of such a disconnected and insulated system where political correctness buries accuracy and image manipulates substance.

A creative middle school textbook, History Alive! The Medieval World and Beyond 2005, definition of jihad is an example. It explains, “The word jihad means ‘to strive.’ Jihad represents the human struggle to overcome difficulties and do things that would be pleasing to God. Muslims strive to respond positively to personal difficulties as well as worldly challenges. For instance, they might work to become better people, reform society, or correct injustice.”

This talk show, self-help description of jihad grasps at an obscure, non-conventional meaning to hide its standard and common use as justification for terrorism being blessed by Allah. Jihad by the History Alive! definition sounds like a peaceful progressive movement. Islam’s human rights abuses of women, slavery, militant expansions, conversions by the sword, and massacres are commonly sanitized by public school textbooks. 

In stark contrast, Western civilization, America, Christianity and capitalism are too often portrayed in negative terms by the same history textbooks. Western achievements are ignored or minimized, leaving young minds uninformed and ashamed of their cultural heritage. The liberal penchant for self-loathing is not simply inaccurate, but extremely dangerous when it becomes a running theme for history instruction.

A young Abraham Lincoln pointed out the duties of citizens and the dangers America faced in 1838. He emphasized the blessings inherited from the generation that fought in the Revolutionary War to secure and establish our great nation, obligating his generation to pass this legacy on to the next generation unprofaned. His words are as valid for us in 2008.

Lincoln went on to dismiss foreign invasion as the instrument of destroying America, concluding, “At what point then is the approach of danger to be expected? I answer, if it ever reach us, it must spring up amongst us. It cannot come from abroad. If destruction be our lot, we must ourselves be its author and finisher. As a nation of freemen, we must live through all time, or die by suicide.”

This is not to advocate “blind” patriotism. Rather it is incumbent upon us to transmit to our posterity the full depth and texture of history, free from the current political and academic fads of trashing and bashing America. Stalin, who knew better than most, explained to H.G. Wells in a famous interview that education was a weapon. Let us not turn it on ourselves.
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The Great Illusion

Time to end the State Board of Education’s magic show of supporting charter schools
By Joe Enge
 
Expert illusionists, out of necessity, have to be highly skilled at diversion and distraction to manipulate audiences with misdirection. The same is true of the Nevada State Board of Education (NSBOE) that normally excels at subtle nuances to gut charter schools, or other reforms that challenge the status quo, while publicly keeping their facade as champions intact. 

While pretending to embrace charter schools, they are actually choking them as the NSBOE has been extremely successful in keeping their number in Nevada embarrassingly low at 22, of which five are state sponsored. Arizona, by stark contrast, has issued 355 charters that operate 469 school sites.

Deftly, the NSBOE successfully changed NRS wording from “shall” to “may” during the 2005 session regarding state charter school approval without many key legislators being aware. Lance Burton would be proud to have pulled that trick.

Not only was the NSBOE able to squirm out of sponsoring charter schools without drawing much attention, they were very effective in closing them with hypercritical vigilance under the guise of accountability. Divide and conquer policy was effective as charter schools knew they couldn’t outrun the NSBOE bear, but simply had to outrun the other guy.

So what changed to warrant their unanimous vote on Nov. 30 for a moratorium on charter school applications? Concern over the Nevada Department of Education being overwhelmed by charter school applications without enough personnel to properly handle them is the public diversion. Adding a nice touch: NSBOE members espousing their general support of charter schools and insisting they wanted to maintain their quality.

Board member Cindy Reid told the Las Vegas Review-Journal, “I really like charter schools. I think they play a valuable role in our state. But if we don’t take a pause now, we will hurt the program more by not running it responsibly and efficiently.” Reid sponsored this agenda item as chair of the subcommittee on charter schools.

Two of the most involved legislators in education and members of the Interim Legislative Committee on Education were not distracted by the slight of hand. Separate, warnings came from Sen. Maurice Washington (R) and Assemblywoman Bonnie Parnell (D), stating in no uncertain terms the statutory obligations of the NSDOE to process all charter school applications. The Nevada State Charter School Leadership Team, a bipartisan group formed by a grant from the National Governors Association, was taken by surprise when NSBOE ignored their expert advice to not enact a moratorium.

Liberty Watch readers may remember my May 2007 column “Battle for Control” on a bill last session to strip the NSBOE of its powers and put the Nevada Department of Education under the governor’s authority. In light of the lack of confidence many lawmakers already have in the state board, dismissing warnings from Sen. Washington and Assemblywoman Parnell is not the hallmark of political wisdom. Criticisms from Sen. Bill Raggio (R) during the hearing last April included descriptions of the NSBOE performance over the last decade as being dysfunctional and lacking leadership. For the state’s highest education board to confirm such an appraisal so shortly after these scathing legislative indictments comes across as counterproductive. 

The short-sighted objective appears as an attempt to force the legislature to funnel greater resources in their direction, ostensibly to oversee charter schools. The unintended long-term consequence may be a greater consensus that the NSBOE is the biggest obstacle for not only charter schools but education reform in general for the Silver State.

The inherent conflict of interest with the NSBOE overseeing charter schools is the root of the problem. They represent the highly entrenched powers within the public education system that jealously guard their territory and are willing to use any artifice available. Arizona wisely recognized this obstacle by forming the Arizona State Board for Charter Schools as a separate body from their own state board of education. We would be wise to do the same. The future of Nevada’s charter schools shall, not may, remain in jeopardy until the NSBOE is pulled off the stage and this destructive magic show of illusion is put to an end.
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Lessons from Texas

We should recognize the benefits of end-of-course exams
By Joe Enge
 
Recognition is beginning to grow across the country that end-of-course exams are a superior alternative to proficiency tests as a requirement for high school graduation. Texas is the most recent state to phase out proficiencies in favor of the end-of-course approach to measuring student learning and readiness for college. 

Historically, the states, including Nevada, have justifiably instituted high-stakes proficiency exams (HSPEs) in mathematics, English and writing as high school graduation requirements to serve as a quality-control measure above and beyond letter grades and credits. This was an accountability reform that resulted in greater effort on the part of many students to acquire long-term skills instead of just putting forth the minimum effort needed to pass their classes. 

The initial wave of criticism came from parents of students who did not pass the proficiency tests, as well as from the usual anti-testing critics. But over time, the tests became an accepted requirement. 

Then No Child Left Behind came into the picture. While providing greater accountability in public education than had existed before, the HSPEs were shown to have many unintended consequences that were magnified greatly with federal intervention. 

The idea behind end-of-course exams is that to get credit, students must pass a specific high-content state exam in English I or Algebra I, for example, rather than the less rigorous, across-the-board HSPE in the 10th or 11th grade. This allows teachers to focus on the specific subject more than he or she currently can, given the broad nature of the proficiency system. 

Not only does such an approach deepen content knowledge in high school, it also addresses the problem that the currently non-tested classes get turned into preparatory sessions for the tested areas. Since U.S. History is not currently a tested subject, for example, administrators are tempted to emphasize English in history classes over the actual history content. 

HSPEs fall far short in their ability to predict Nevada students’ college success. Students, after multiple runs at the HSPEs, pass the basic tests and have the grades to move into Nevada’s higher education system. Yet the numbers show that an alarming number end up having to take remediation courses. The remediation rates are 46 percent for four-year colleges and 64 percent for two-year colleges. 

These unintended consequences are a serious problem, as Texas and Indiana have recently recognized, warranting a complete overhaul of high school testing. Given that Nevada faces the same problems, it’s worth looking at how the issue has been addressed elsewhere. 

The governor of Texas this past June signed legislation that phases out the state’s version of HSPEs, the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (TAKS), to be replaced by end-of-course exams. The widespread benefit of such a move was recognized across the political spectrum, as evidenced by the 30-0 vote in the Texas Senate and the 145-0 vote in the Texas House (with one present not voting). 

The Texas Senate Research Center offered the following analysis: “While improving the educational attainment of students, the cumulative Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (TAKS) testing regime has had unintended consequences. Students are provided with a single avenue to success and may not achieve the level of college readiness they are truly capable of because TAKS tests are generic and shallow in scope. Many teachers do not focus on the richness of the curriculum for a particular subject, instead spending valuable time preparing students for these tests because they are evaluated on their students’ performance on the tests.”

Indiana developed a similar program, called Core 40 End-of-Course Assessments, which currently test students in Algebra I and English II. The state is also conducting voluntary pilot test administrations in Algebra II, Biology I and U.S. History. 

Sound policy dictates that one of the interim education studies leading up to the 2009 session should analyze the end-of-course exam system and the potential benefits for Nevada.
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Talking to the Hand

School boards have turned the Open Meeting Law upside down
By Joe Enge
 
Nevada’s Open Meeting Law was designed to generate public discourse and debate. Yet school boards have, ironically, used it instead as a means of avoiding frank discussion with the public — thus turning the law on its head.

The tactic of some school boards has been to tell citizens, during public comment, that the law precludes board members from discussing issues raised by the public that are not on the agenda.

This misinterpretation of the Open Meeting Law allows school boards to avoid addressing unexpected and uncomfortable topics during public comment sessions. Naturally, citizens feel antagonized upon being told, essentially, to “talk to the hand.” Eventually – and indeed this was perhaps the intent all along – people draw the conclusion that to raise such issues during public comment is pointless.

If the Open Meeting Law is being used for purposes that directly oppose its obvious intent, legislation would seem in order. Yet legislation shouldn’t be necessary, as this problem was actually resolved 16 years ago, after the Clark County School District employed the typical “we are precluded by the Open Meeting Law to respond or discuss” tactic. This prompted Assemblyman Lou Bergevin of Douglas County to push for legislation during the 1991 Session stating unequivocally that public bodies may discuss matters raised by the public.

New counsel for the Clark County School District supported the change in 1991, telling the Assembly Committee on Government Affairs, “… [W]hen the board members do not respond to the individuals concerned, it makes the individuals very antagonistic and they are very upset by an absence of response. So what we are asking for is the ability to allow the public to come forward, express their concerns, and get feedback from the board without taking any official action.”

The legislation passed and has been law ever since. Yet in some quarters, the old “We can’t respond” canard remains alive and well here in 2007.

Of Nevada’s 17 school districts, three continued to misuse the law even after the 1991 law was passed. The Washoe County School District’s agenda states that “[t]he Board is precluded from discussing or acting on items raised by Public Comment, which are not already on the agenda.” The Eureka County School District’s policy says the same thing, word for word.

That the Washoe County School District has not changed its agenda’s wording is rather surprising in light of the 2005 warning it received from the attorney general that “… this Office advises that the Board change its policy of stating that the law prohibits the Board from commenting on statements made by the general public.”

The third culprit, Carson City, ended the practice of misusing the Open Meeting Law in September of this year. While the district never put its misguided policy in writing, it regularly verbalized its position to citizens who spoke up at meetings. As a member of that board, I made frequent objections to its interpretation and requested that Assistant Attorney General George Taylor address the issue. On September 4, 2007, Taylor clarified the 1991 law, telling us that 1) the legislature encourages public bodies to engage in discussion with members of the public; and 2) the law does not require the public body to answer inquiries made during public comment; it simply does not prohibit discussion.

Some counties are to be commended for their commitment to openness, particularly Mineral County, whose policy says, “It is the School Board’s intention to listen and be responsive to the general public’s concerns.” Clark and Nye Counties also have policies that explicitly encourage open dialogue.

Not so in Esmeralda County, where the policy is to tell citizens to “… please know that it is not our intention to respond to/or discuss your comments at this meeting.” Esmeralda’s position is legal and within the board’s rights, if not very inviting.

While public bodies pay lip service to the idea of welcoming public input, the reality is that many consider it a nuisance. It is disconcerting that any school district, 16 years after the passage of a law clearly intended to encourage public discourse, is still getting away with subverting both the letter and the intent of Nevada’s Open Meeting Law.

Joe Enge is education policy analyst at the Nevada Policy Research Institute.

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United against Choice

Opponents of school choice continue to march in lockstep
By Joe Enge
 
While recognition is growing that greater school choice is badly needed in Nevada and across the country, the National Education Association, at its annual meeting in Philadelphia this summer, hardened its position against charter schools and school choice.

Presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama addressed this convention as full supporters of both public schools and the NEA – despite opting to send their own children to expensive private schools.

So here we have wealthy and affluent presidential candidates sending their children to private schools, all the while marching in lockstep with the NEA, forcing less wealthy and affluent kids to stay trapped in underperforming public school systems.

The NEA and its political allies are fighting tooth and nail to prevent parents of special needs students or minorities from opting out of public schools that are not meeting their educational needs.

Here in Nevada, State Sen. Barbara Cegavske introduced a bill during this year’s Legislative Session that would allow parental choice for special needs students. S.B. 158 passed the Senate unanimously but died in the Assembly Ways and Means Committee, never receiving a hearing as the final days of the session expired.

I asked the chairman of the committee, Assemblyman Morse Arberry, about Cegavske’s bill during those final days. His response: “The voucher bill. Democrats don’t like vouchers.”

The message was clear: Political special interests take priority over sound, substantive policy that would provide the best education possible for children and give parents more options.

Growing parental demand for more educational freedom is by no means limited to the Silver State.

Georgia, for one, recently passed a special-needs student choice bill. Jim Wooten, writing in the July 13 issue of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, observed that “[t]he pent-up demand for alternatives to traditional public schools erupted in Georgia last week. Some 3,300 families of children with special needs applied for vouchers to cover or supplement the purchase of services they want for their children elsewhere. When parents are near tears because they want alternatives they don’t have to traditional public schools, and when 3,300 families step forward to take responsibility for the education of their special-needs children, the public and policy-makers should take note. The world has changed.”

In South Carolina, a political maelstrom is emerging over the lack of school choice for blacks. Pastor Richard L. Davis, co-founder of Clergy for Education Options, wrote in the Augusta Chronicle on July 15, “The truth about South Carolina education is this – if you have resources, you have choices. If you do not, your children will remain trapped in failing schools and there is not a thing you can do about it. And the sad truth is that the current system is far more likely to shortchange minority children than white children. More whites live in better neighborhoods than blacks, and as a consequence black children attend our state's worst public schools.”

Davis noted further, “We are out of time for this generation. Too many children are lost in failing schools and we cannot afford to wait until the politicians in Columbia decide how to fix those schools from the top-down - Soviet Union command style. Black families want the same option to take charge of their children's education as so many white families have. The government needs to get out of the way and let us do it. Our children do not deserve to be failed any longer.”

The late Milton Friedman said in his last major public appearance in May of 2006, “We have schools choosing the students instead of the students choosing the schools.”

Until we recognize and change the backward nature of this relationship, education in Nevada and America will be unnecessarily expensive and substandard.

In the end, this is not about vouchers or charter schools. It is about students and giving non-wealthy parents the choice to decide what’s best for them and their children.

Joe Enge is education policy analyst at the Nevada Policy Research Institute. This commentary was first published in the September 2007 issue of the Nevada Business Journal.

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Back to School

What are the charter choices in Nevada?
By Joe Enge
 
What choices are available to parents and students in Nevada who are considering the charter school option? What can you do if you don’t like the menu at the geographically mandated government educational cafeteria? Unfortunately, Nevadans have few alternatives.

There are currently only 20 charter schools in the state and one university school for the profoundly gifted. U.S. Charter Schools (USCS) reports that as of 2006, there were 4,500 students attending charter schools in the Silver State.

In contrast, USCS reports that Arizona had 499 charter schools with 86,409 students attending during the last academic year. Florida is listed as having 82,000 students attending 338 charter schools.

Abbe' D'Allanival has been quoted as saying, “The more alternatives, the more difficult the choice.” So perhaps some could argue the altruistic goal behind having few charter schools in Nevada is to ease educational decision making. How thoughtful.

For those seeking alternatives to the traditional system, here is the Nevada Department of Education’s list of charter schools:

Academy for Career Education
School year operation began: 2002-2003 (FY2003)
Sponsor: Washoe County School District
Grades: 10-12
Address: 2800 Vassar St., Reno, NV 89502
Phone: (775) 324-3900

Andre Agassi College Preparatory Academy
School year operation began: 2001-2002 (FY2002)
Sponsor: Clark County School District
Grades: K-12 (K-10 for FY2007; K-11 for FY2008)
Address: 1201 West Lake Mead Blvd., Las Vegas, NV 89106
Phone: (702) 948-6000

Bailey Charter Elementary School
School year operation began: 2001-2002 (FY2002)
Sponsor: Washoe County School District
Grades: K-6
Address: 1090 Bresson Ave., Reno, NV 89502
Phone: (775) 323-6767

Carson Montessori School
School year operation began: 2004-2005 (FY2005)
Sponsor: Carson City School District
Grades: K-6
Address: 2263 Mouton Dr., Carson City, NV 89706
Phone: (775) 887-9500 or (775) 887-9501

Coral Academy of Science
School year operation began: 2000-2001 (FY2001)
Sponsor: Washoe County School District
Grades: K-12 (4-12 currently)
Address: 1350 East Ninth St., Reno, NV 89512
Phone: (775) 323-2332 x114

Explore Knowledge Academy
School year operation began: 2003-2004 (FY2004)
Sponsor: Clark County School District
Grades: K-12
Address: 4801 South Sandhill Rd. and 4845 Community Lane, Las Vegas, NV 89121
Phone: (702) 870-5032

High Desert Montessori School
School year operation began: 2002-2003 (FY2003)
Sponsor: Washoe County School District
Grades: K-8 (K-7 currently)
Address: 2590 Orovada St., Reno, NV 89502
Phone: (775) 624-2800 x103

I Can Do Anything Charter High School
School year operation began: 1998-1999 (FY1999)
Sponsor: Washoe County School District
Grades: 9-12
Address: 1195 Corporate Blvd., Suite C, Reno, NV 89502
Phone: (775) 857-1544

Innovations International Charter School of Nevada
School year operation began: 2006-2007 (FY2007)
Sponsor: Clark County School District
Grades: K-12
Address: 1600 East Oakey Blvd., Las Vegas, NV 89104
Phone: (702) 216-4337

Mariposa Academy of Language and Learning
School year operation began: 2002-2003 (FY2003)
Sponsor: Washoe County School District
Grades: K-6
Address: 3875 Glen St., Reno, NV 89502
Phone: (775) 826-4040

Nevada Connections Academy
School year operation began: 2007-2008 (FY2008)
Sponsor: Nevada State Board of Education
Grades: 4-12
Address: 5690 Riggins Court, Suite B, Reno, NV 89502
Phone: (775) 841-4581

Nevada State High School
School year operation began: 2004-2005 (FY2005)
Sponsor: Nevada State Board of Education
Grades: 11-12
Address: 1125 Nevada State Dr., Henderson, NV 89002
Phone: (702) 992-2017

Nevada Virtual Academy
School year operation began: 2007-2008 (FY2008)
Sponsor: Nevada State Board of Education
Grades: 4-8
Address: 187 East Warm Spring Rd., Suite C, Las Vegas, NV 89119
Phone: (501) 690-9140

Odyssey Charter Schools
School year operation began: 1999-2000 (FY2000)
Sponsor: Clark County School District
Grades: K-12
Address: 2251 South Jones Blvd., Las Vegas, NV 89146
Phone: (702) 257-0578 x5550

One Hundred Academy of Excellence
School year operation began: 2006-2007 (FY2007)
Sponsor: Clark County School District
Grades: K-12 (K-5 currently)
Address: 2341 Comstock Dr., North Las Vegas, NV 89032
Phone: (702) 636-2551

Rainshadow Community Charter High School
School year operation began: 2003-2004 (FY2004)
Sponsor: Washoe County School District
Grades: 9-12
Address: 434 Washington St., Reno, NV 89503-4300
Phone: (775) 322-5566

Sierra Crest Academy
School year operation began: 2004-2005 (FY2005)
Sponsor: Douglas County School District
Grades: K-12 (7-10 currently)
Address: 1701 Lucerne St., Minden, NV 89423
Phone: (775) 783-9002

Sierra Nevada Academy
School year operation began: 1999-2000 (FY2000)
Sponsor: Washoe County School District
Grades: K-8
Address: 13880 Stead Blvd., Reno, NV 89506
Phone: (775) 677-4500 x13

Silver State High School
School year operation began: 2004-2005 (FY2005)
Sponsor: Nevada State Board of Education
Grades: 9-12
Address: 3719 North Carson St., Carson City, NV 89706
Phone: (775) 883-7900

WestCare Charter School
School year operation began: 2007-2008 (FY2008)
Sponsor: Clark County School District
Grades: 7-12
Address: 2025 Eagle Traceway, Las Vegas, NV 89117
Phone: (702) 528-2614

The Davidson Academy of Nevada
(Serving profoundly gifted students at UNR)
School year operation began: 2006-2007 (FY2007)
School year state payments began: 2007-2008 (FY2008)
Sponsor: None
Grades: Ungraded (non-traditional grades)
Address: 1670 North Virginia St., 2nd Floor, Reno, NV 89503
Phone: (775) 337-0171 x105

Joe Enge is education policy analyst at the Nevada Policy Research Institute.

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A success in any language

The Mariposa Academy is a hit among Hispanic students
By Joe Enge
 
Trying to be everything to everybody is a sure recipe for failure.

Yet, to maintain its education monopoly, that’s what the Nevada public school system attempts to do. No matter how diverse the specialization – from college preparation to kids with Down Syndrome, from career and technical education to English as a second language – the public ed system insists that it, and only it, be employed to address the issue.

The result is what we see: a system regularly failing the often unique needs of our students.

Indeed, the sheer size and broad scope of the traditional system – based on where students live rather than on their needs, interests or abilities – hobbles even the most dedicated and talented teachers.

Charter schools, however, are flexible enough to be able to target the unique academic needs of individual students and broader populations as well.

The Mariposa Academy in Reno is a prime example. First opening its doors for the 2002-03 school year, it brings a specialized, clearly focused approach to its education mission: providing dual language instruction to native Spanish speakers from kindergarten through the sixth grade.

Founders Jesse and Estela Gutierrez recognized that many Hispanic students were unable to flourish within the traditional public school structure because they lacked the foundational grasp of Spanish needed in order to expand and succeed in English.

The school’s Dual Language Program, in which students learn both Spanish and English, runs from kindergarten through the third grade. From the fourth grade to the sixth, instruction is conducted primarily in English, with students receiving Spanish enrichment. This model is based on research that shows tremendous academic benefits to solidifying the native language while learning a second during these years.

“We use immersion education, meaning that language minority students and language majority students receive subject matter instruction through their primary language and secondary language,” said Sandra Jimenez, the Academy’s director. “This model’s purpose is to develop and maintain students’ primary language as well as become fluent in written and oral English.”

Jimenez said one of the great advantages of charter schools is their ability to be flexible in their teaching methods while still meeting the state’s academic standards. She considers the standard ESL approach used in traditional public schools to be a “subtractive” method, by which Spanish-speaking students lose their native language. ESL is often one-way instruction, not immersion but, rather, submersion of the primary language. The Academy points to research demonstrating that continuing to develop a child’s native language actually facilitates the process of learning English.

Central to the Academy’s philosophy is that knowing more than one language increases a person’s thinking abilities. Bilingual children have greater mental flexibility. Anyone who has learned a second language will recognize the reflexive learning of his own language that takes place upon seeing different linguistic constructions in another. In many languages, an adjective is placed after the noun it modifies – for example, “car red” instead of “red car” – a phenomenon that makes students aware that there are alternative ways of expression.

Above and beyond language reinforcement and acquisition, the Mariposa Academy connects the two worlds of Spanish (in the home) and English (in the school). Many Hispanic students have a weak grasp of their native language and lack a full appreciation of the benefits schools can provide, making academic success even more challenging. As Jimenez explained, “For many of our Hispanic parents, like my own, it’s not that they don’t value education, they don’t understand it. But they do understand the opportunities that come with education and they value hard work.”

The school plans on breaking ground Oct. 1 for a new building for grades four through six, with an auditorium to replace the existing modular classrooms. The new auditorium will allow all of the students to meet together. Current space limitations allow only one grade at a time to meet in the cafeteria area. The long-term plan is to eventually build a “Mariposa Village” between the current building and the new one, serving as a community plaza for families, Hispanic businesses and events.

As Nevada’s Hispanic school enrollment numbers continue to increase, this little charter school of 177 students has a lot to teach us. It is a shame that Nevada has such an anemic number of charter schools: a mere 20. (Arizona has almost 470.)

We should reform our restrictive charter school regulations and allow such schools funding equal to traditional public schools. Allowing students and parents greater choice will mean allowing everyone more opportunities for success.

Joe Enge is education policy analyst at the Nevada Policy Research Institute.

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Don’t practice whole language on my kids: history of the phonics vs. whole language debate

Below is one of the most informative and detailed articles I’ve come across regarding the whole language fiasco. The Weekly Standard’s “Read it and weep” by Charlotte Allen is far too long to print here. Key excerpts include:

American young people are also significantly behind their counterparts in other developed and even some developing countries. On the Progress in International Reading Study (PIRLS), a multinational test for fourth-graders administered in 2001, the United States placed only 9th out of 35 participating nations, trailing top-rated Sweden, the Netherlands, and England–despite spending more per student on education than any other nation in the world. On the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA), a test of 15-year-olds in 2003, American students ranked just about in the middle in literacy skills, way behind their coevals in top-ranking Finland and a score of other countries including South Korea, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. It is an educational commonplace that children who cannot read at grade level by the fourth grade are unlikely ever to be able to read well enough to tackle the specialized textbooks they will encounter in science, history, and other subjects as they move to higher grades. More likely, they will fall further and further behind in school, eventually dropping out in many cases.

It would seem obvious, too, that learning how to read involves real learning–receiving and internalizing step-by-step instructions on how to decode the symbols on the page, fit them to spoken sounds, and then link those sounds to meaning. Hence vocabulary lists and the old-fashioned technique of having novice readers “sound out” words by reading aloud in class in order to associate sounds and letters. Children also need to learn how to make all those connections quickly and almost unconsciously, or reading will always be difficult and unpleasant for them, which is why fluency and comprehension are key measures of reading skill. Learning how to read would seem analogous to learning how to play the piano, in which practicing scales, mastering fingering technique, decoding the notes, and developing a feeling for the rhythm and beauty of the music are simultaneous but separate components of the process.

All this common-sense intuition–much of which underlay the famous phonics-intensive McGuffey Readers of the 19th century–is in fact supported by decades of 20th-century scientific research into how people actually learn how to read, starting with the work of Jeanne Stern licht Chall, a psychologist with a special interest in fostering the literacy skills of poor children who founded the Harvard Reading Laboratory at Harvard’s graduate school of education in 1966. Starting in the 1970s, a flood of reading studies–an estimated 10,000 in all–applied quantitative analysis and experimental, control-group-based research to identify the instruction strategies that teach reading most efficiently. The researchers included not only specialists in education and early childhood development but also experts in such fields as linguistics, psychology, neurology, genetics, anthropology, and sociology.

The resolutely apolitical NICHD, part of the National Institutes of Health, has been funding studies of reading development since 1964, and has sponsored longitudinal studies of 44,000 children in more than 1,000 schools since the early 1980s, tracking some of those children and their reading progress for more than 20 years as they grew to adulthood. It was all that research which led the NICHD to identify the five components that appear in Reading First’s enabling legislation (phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension). The value of these studies, their proponents argue, is that like all scientific studies, they are based on rigorous methodologies–assessments, for example, not only of how well children can read using various instruction strategies, but even how they move their eyes as they scan a printed page. And, like all valid scientific findings, the results can be replicated.

“We know how reading is acquired,” says Louisa Cook Moats, a protégée of Jeanne Chall’s at Harvard and director of the NICHD’s Early Reading Interventions project from 1997 to 2001. “It’s learning to process very specific kinds of linguistic information and build networks that coordinate phonological processing to the patterns of printed symbols that the eye sees, and it’s also connected to meaning and the building of vocabulary. When I explain how the process works to teachers, I compare it to an unraveled rope with the strands sticking out. The strands are all those beginning skills to be woven together in the rope.” Reading looks automatic and natural, Moats explains, but only because skilled readers are practiced enough to decode the symbols at lightning speed.

There are many causes for the resistance of the education establishment not only to the conclusions that Moats and others have drawn about reading instruction but to the research that underlies those conclusions. One bedrock philosophical principle, however, unites all those who oppose the step-by-step teaching of literacy skills: the notion that learning how to read is not at all like learning how to play the piano. Instead, the proponents of “whole language” instruction contend, it is a natural process akin to learning how to speak–something that children don’t have to be taught formally but pick up automatically if exposed to a sufficiently print-rich environment. Stephen D. Krashen, a professor emeritus of education at the University of Southern California and self-described “staunch defender” of whole-language strategies, explained in an email: “[A]ny child exposed to comprehensible print will learn to read, barring severe neurological or emotional problems.” Or, as Krashen amplified in a telephone interview: “Kids learn to read by reading.”

Hence the antipathy of the whole-language proponents to having children read a story out of a reader such as Houghton Mifflin’s; that doesn’t count as “real reading,” to borrow a phrase from Krashen’s email. Indeed, textbooks or any other kind of formal instructional material are eschewed. In elementary-school classrooms across the country, reading instruction typically consists of what is called “shared reading.” The teacher reads a story aloud to the class, often from a “Big Book,” an oversized, large-type edition of an illustrated children’s book of the teacher’s choosing that is propped up on a table or on the floor in front of the class. The teacher might read the story out loud several times, pointing out words that may be difficult, and then have the class read the story aloud in unison while the teacher turns the pages. There is almost no individual reading aloud, and the sounding out of words phonetically is actively discouraged as tending to turn youngsters into rote parsers of syllables who fail to understand what they are reading.

As for phonics per se, both Krashen and Yvonne Siu-Runyan insist that they indeed incorporate phonics instruction into their reading strategies, but only in elementary fashion and on an as-needed basis–”basic phonics,” as Krashen puts it. Whole-language instruction also typically includes periods of independent silent reading–”Drop Everything and Read” is the name for these impromptu sessions–in which the children pick out and peruse material of their choice from a classroom library of “leveled books”–that is, books that the teacher deems appropriate for their reading level. During these sessions the teacher typically “models” the process by dropping everything and reading silently from a children’s book, too, on the principle that seeing other people read encourages reading. As for vocabulary, whole-language classrooms typically incorporate a “word wall”–an ever-changing collection of large-letter words written on posters that the children chant together cheerleader-style and then write out.

The instructional principles behind whole language–light on formal content and heavy on assumptions that children will learn to read by feeling enthusiastic about reading–are far from new. Indeed, they date back to the end of the 19th century, to the educational theories of John Dewey (1859-1952), the pragmatist philosopher and educational theorist who held that children learn best not by directly absorbing instruction from their teachers in specific subjects such as mathematics or history, but by interacting with the real world. School, in Dewey’s thinking, should offer a simulacrum of real-world experience in which learning takes place obliquely as the child explores his or her surroundings under the guidance of a teacher. Dewey was in turn influenced by the romantic philosophy of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, who believed that children were naturally perfect and that education ought to consist of allowing them maximum freedom to develop their innate talents.

In 1904 Dewey joined the faculty of Columbia Teachers College, regarded then as now as America’s premier education school (U.S. News currently gives Columbia Teachers its No. 1 rating). From there Dewey’s “progressive” theories of pedagogy profoundly influenced several generations of American teachers and school boards, right up until the Sputnik launch of 1957, when it suddenly looked as though the Soviet Union, whose Communist leaders had kept in place a decidedly non-progressive education system dating from czarist days, had the United States over a barrel in science and technology. The Dick and Jane readers widely used in American elementary schools from the 1930s through the 1950s were offshoots of a branch of Dewey-ism that held that phonics instruction was backward and proposed that the way to make children literate was to expose them to simple words repeated interminably. (”See Dick. See Dick run. See Dick run fast.”) This so-called “look-say” pedagogy (a forerunner to whole language in its emphasis on context and meaning rather than sounds and letters) met its end after Rudolf Flesch published his bestselling Why Johnny Can’t Read in 1955, two years before Sputnik. By the early 1960s it looked as though progressive education had run its course in all but the most outré private schools. Jeanne Chall’s 1967 book Learning to Read: The Great Debate, proposed a return to thorough grounding in phonics, but in up-to-date combination with interesting children’s literature.

Then came a revolution in pedagogy that swept through the K-12 grades in the 1970s and 1980s as thoroughly as its college-level sister, postmodernism, swept through the academy. The revolution was called “constructivism.” Like postmodernism, it had its grounding in arcane Francophone theory: the ideas of the Swiss cognitive psychologist Jean Piaget. Piaget proposed that children progress through distinct developmental stages during which they acquire knowledge not simply by learning it from the outside but by “constructing” it from within, building upon and reflecting upon what they already know in order to rise to new levels of knowing. In Piaget’s theoretical dialectic, the subjective process of learning was more important than any particular content learned. Indeed, Piaget argued, it was crucial that the developmental process taking place within each individual child’s mind not be interfered with, but rather nurtured and encouraged by the child’s teachers. As the ubiquitous mantra of Piaget-influenced educational theory later put it, the teacher should be “a guide on the side, not a sage on the stage.” The essential constructivist principle is that teachers should teach nothing directly, but rather function as coaches while their students basically teach themselves.

This was Dewey’s progressivism with a new, fashionably Continental face. “The idea is that education is growth, education is development, and that children grow all by themselves,” said Diane Ravitch, an education policy analyst and author of Left Back: A Century of Battles over School Reform, a mordant critique of constructivism. “The idea is that children figure everything out for themselves,” Ravitch added. “There’s no authority.”

Piaget acquired an army of American apostles at education schools and elsewhere. Chief among them were Frank Smith, an Australian journalist-turned university instructor, and Kenneth Goodman, an education professor at the University of Arizona. Smith, whose 1971 book Understanding Reading derided the teaching of phonics, and Goodman are credited as the creators of whole-language theory. In a 1967 article in an education journal, Goodman had described the process of learning to read as a “psycholinguistic guessing game” in which children decipher words on a page, not by decoding them phonetically as Chall maintained, but by following “cues.” The cues, Goodman maintained, can be the individual letters and sounds in the word–or they can be the larger context of the story in which the word appears, the artist’s illustrations, or even (and perhaps especially) the child’s own previously acquired knowledge. Like Smith, Goodman argued that phonics instruction was useless at best, downright harmful at worst. “Matching letters with sounds is a flat-earth view of the world,” he declared in a 1986 book, What’s Whole in Whole Language. Dramatically turning centuries-old principles of reading instruction on their heads, Goodman maintained that “a story is easier to read than a page, a page easier to read than a paragraph, a paragraph easier than a sentence, a sentence easier than a word, and a word easier than a letter.”

Both Smith, who had never taught reading in an elementary-school classroom, and Goodman, who had, derided the use of textbooks, worksheets, and other formal instructional material. Smith’s 1986 book, Insult to Intelligence: The Bureaucratic Invasion of Our Classrooms, complained about children being forced by their elders to memorize mountains of useless data. (Memorization is generally considered in constructivist theory to be developmentally inappropriate for elementary school.) In whole-language theory, the teacher’s job is to identify the child’s errors–or “miscues,” as they are called–and nudge the child in the direction of the correct cues. “Drill and Kill” is their derisive term for pedagogy that emphasizes the systematic teaching of content.

Thus began the practice, now a bedrock of whole-language pedagogy, of teachers’ encouraging beginning readers to look at the first letter of any difficult word they encounter in a story and guess the rest, or if that strategy fails to produce results, simply to skip the word and return to it later. Although Goodman refused to be interviewed for this article, stating in a pair of dyspeptic emails that he would not respond to “negative” criticism of his theories, Yvonne Siu-Runyan provided an example of how a whole-language reading lesson works in practice. “A child encounters the word ‘butterflies’ in a story,” said Siu-Runyan. “The first time he reads it as ‘b-flies.’ Maybe the next time he reads it as ‘butt-flies’ and the next time as ‘betterflies.’ For me to assume he’s not going to get it would be a mistake, because finally he’ll say to himself, ‘Does this make sense?’ He’ll look at the pictures of butterflies [in the book] and say to himself, ‘Oh, this is a story about butterflies!’ And he’ll get it right after that. It’s a lot more complicated a process than handing a child a list of words.”

Whole language and other aspects of constructivist theory swept through the education schools, starting with the flagship Columbia Teachers College, where Dewey’s progressive influence had never waned, where courses on reading pedagogy to this day concentrate on erecting a “theoretical framework” for instruction rather than teaching teachers what actually works in classrooms, and where the school’s publishing affiliate, Teachers College Press, churns out dozens of constructivist treatises every year. Smith and Goodman crisscrossed the country on the ed-school lecture circuit, where they were welcomed with open arms and standing ovations by professors and students alike. Whole language clearly appealed because it allowed teachers to do essentially what they liked in their reading classes, and it relieved them of the arduous work of ensuring that their students had mastered specific literacy skills. Teachers and administrators rushed to create “child-centered” and “learner-centered” curricula in every field and at every grade level (”learner” being the fashionable ed-speak word these days for “student,” as it connotes the constructivist idea that children take charge of their own education).

Sandra Wilde, an education professor at Portland State University in Oregon, deemed that learning how to spell, like learning how to read, “should ultimately be as natural, unconscious, effortless, and pleasant as learning to speak,” so spellers went the way of readers in classrooms across the country. Teachers encouraged youngsters to make up their own “invented” or “independent” spelling, also under the influence of Wilde’s self-described “holistic” approach, which theorized that children could learn from their spelling “miscues.” Wilde drafted a “Speller’s Bill of Rights” that included “the right to be valued as a human being regardless of your spelling.” Whole-language advocates and other constructivists also abandoned conventional tests and letter grades, which they thought slighted youngsters’ individuality, in favor of what they called “authentic assessment.” That usually means having students assemble samples of their work in a “portfolio” (the oversized envelope that artists take to job interviews) that the teacher then evaluates verbally.

Systematic lessons in grammar, handwriting, and punctuation also went by the boards, thought to be developmentally inappropriate for young children. The teaching of writing completely changed focus. Teachers in the primary grades had traditionally taught their students first how to construct grammatical and properly punctuated sentences, then how to form paragraphs, and finally how to build paragraphs into simple essays and stories. All this was abandoned in favor of a kind of writers’ workshop approach that focused on students’ self-expression and personal reactions. “Journaling,” which allows youngsters to choose their own topics to write about, became a favored classroom writing activity, even for kindergartners and first-graders. Students were encouraged not to worry about grammatical and spelling errors, as these could be cleaned up in an “editing” process with the teacher. Imitating the graduate writing program at the University of Iowa and the copy-desk procedures at the New Yorker was supposed to turn 6-year-olds into sophisticated writers, critics, and thinkers.

Two education professors at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Donald A. McAndrew and C. Mark Hurlbert, in an award-winning 1993 article in the journal of the National Council of Teachers of English, went so far as to urge students to indulge in “intentional errors” of syntax and usage as a way of rebelling against the “tyranny” of standard English usage. In 2003 the National Council took its own insurrectionist stand against standard English, voting to endorse a manifesto titled “Students’ Right to Their Own Language”–namely the right to write their homework in hip-hop-ese, Spanglish, Valley Girl talk, or whatever other nonstandard dialect they believe best expresses their “community” or “personal” identities. Many whole-language teachers do not bother to prepare lesson plans or syllabi, relying instead on querying their students on what they would like to learn on any particular day.

Like their opposite numbers in the reading science community, whole language advocates can point to plenty of published research, fattening the education journals and bolstering what the whole-language proponents insist is their superior approach to teaching literacy. That research, however, almost uniformly consists of anecdotal recollections by its authors of eureka! moments in their classrooms. The story that Siu-Runyan narrated about the child who finally deciphered the word “butterflies” is a perfect example. The education-school slang term for such “qualitative” (in contrast to quantitative) observations, analogous to the material that anthropologists record in their field notebooks, is “kidwatching.” Almost all kidwatching research consists of teachers’ first-person success stories–because whole-language advocates are human and they almost never report their classroom failures. “But they’re sure that those reports [in the education journals] are 100 percent scientific,” says Patrick Goff, a professor emeritus of education at San Diego State University in California and reading science advocate. “That’s because you can get a Ph.D. in education without ever having to read a single quantitative study. Even my own university would not teach its students about the empirical evidence concerning the teaching of reading.”

Fortunately, perhaps, for about 40 to 50 percent of children–the socioeconomic top 40 to 50 percent hailing from upper-middle-class-to-wealthy “print-rich” homes where the reading of books, magazines, and newspapers is an everyday occurrence–whole-language reading pedagogy does little if any harm. The most verbal of these youngsters, the gifted offspring of lawyers, college professors, and Hollywood screenwriters, either already know how to read by the time they get to kindergarten or pick up reading quickly no matter how they are taught. Others who are not so naturally verbal struggle with whole language’s guessing games and unsystematic instruction but eventually manage to read at grade level and to write and spell passably. Furthermore, many whole-language proponents, such as Siu-Runyan and Krashen, are clearly patient, gifted, imaginative teachers sensitive to their students as individuals (Siu-Runyan says she slips structure into her student-interest-driven lesson plans, and Krashen, who currently teaches in a suburb of Portland, Oregon, where whole language is officially verboten, runs his classes as a kind of Dead Poets Society, ignoring the ban while the administration looks the other way).

Indeed, even the staunchest supporters of the five-component scientific approach to literacy acknowledge that whole language’s emphasis on child-friendly classrooms and high-quality children’s literature are valuable contributions to pedagogy. Those desks arranged in clusters, not rows, the children sitting on the floor, and the plethora of stimulating books in Laverne Johnson’s classroom at Ginter Park represent some of the best of whole language’s legacy. Finally, many affluent parents with progressive political leanings actually prefer the unstructured, arts-and-crafts-oriented methodology of constructivism, which is why private progressive elementary schools such as the Dalton School in Manhattan and the Peninsula School near San Francisco continue to flourish (by the time those children enter high school, though, SAT cram courses and the rat race for Ivy League admissions are the order of the day; few of America’s top private prep schools operate on progressive pedagogical principles).

The children who suffer from the whole-language revolution are that bottom 40 percent of American children, the poor and near-poor who come from households where books are seldom seen and where unschooled parents have starved their offspring of the rich vocabulary and cultural exposure to which better-off children are accustomed as a matter of course. Children whose parents don’t speak English at home fare worst of all in whole language. This group of low-income, print-deprived children is the group that needs direct reading instruction most desperately, and as the results in Richmond indicate, benefits from it most dramatically.

Long before Reading First became law in 2002, there had been a backlash against whole language by parents and school superintendents unimpressed by their students’ low test scores despite being assured that their children were being taught according to the most up-to-date ideas. In 1987 the state of California mandated a whole-language approach to reading and writing. Within a few years California’s reading scores on the NAEP test plummeted to third-lowest in the United States and its overseas territories; only Louisiana and Guam ranked lower. The decline stretched across the socioeconomic board, among the offspring of the college-educated as well as the offspring of Hispanic immigrants.

Jill Stewart, a writer for the Los Angeles Weekly, visited a second-grade classroom at a highly regarded school on Los Angeles’s wealthy Westside. There she met a little girl who wrote “I go t gum calls” for “I go to gym class” in a journal that was entirely free of punctuation (which hadn’t been taught yet). In another classroom, a 7-year-old boy had gotten by with memorizing the “shared reading” story that the teacher had read over and over but could not actually read a single word of the story on his own. At one Los Angeles school parents held nacho sales to buy their classrooms forbidden spellers. In Charles Sykes’s book Dumbing Down Our Kids, a mother complained that her fourth-grade daughter had received a grade of check-plus (above average) and a teacher’s notation of “Wow!” for these sentences: “I’m goin to has majik skates. Im goin to go to disenelan. Im goin to bin my mom and dad and brusr and sisd. We r go to se mickey mouse.”

In 1996 California officially dumped whole language. (After parents there discovered that their fourth-graders couldn’t do long division, a similar, equally successful grassroots rebellion overthrew another constructivist fad promoted by education schools, “fuzzy” mathematics–in which children aren’t taught standard computations, the multiplication tables, or common formulas, but spend hours of class time pretending to be Pythagoras and trying to reinvent his theorem with sheets of colored paper.) A short time after the whole-language revolt, the Los Angeles Unified School District mandated the use of Open Court Reading, a phonics-based instruction program marketed by McGraw-Hill that happens to pass muster with Reading First. Deborah Jewell-Sherman’s decision to mandate Voyager Universal Literacy in Richmond also preceded Reading First. Indeed, after the California debacle, the education-school establishment began a strategic retreat in its antagonism toward phonics instruction. Many whole-language people now prefer to use the term “balanced literacy,” which means weaving a bit of phonics weft into the whole-language warp.

I can’t believe it! Reading and writing actually paid off!
Matt Groening, The Simpsons
US cartoonist & satirist (1954 - )

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Office of the AG agrees Carson City School board agenda item would have violated the Open Meeting Law

The Office of the Attorney General agreed with my concerns as a trustee of the Carson City School District that an agenda item for the district’s January 9, 2007 meeting was vague, too broad, and lacked specificity in violation of the Open Meeting Law (OML). I raised this issue before and during the January 9th meeting suggesting it be tabled and then voted against it when it wasn’t tabled. Ann Bednarski took these concerns to the AG’s office as a formal complaint the next day on January 10th. The response to the complaint was received by Bednarski on July 5, 2007.

Upon receiving the agenda for my first school board meeting in January as a newly elected trustee, agenda item # 6 “Adoption of policies and bylaws” seemed too vague to the point of being meaningless. I looked up the guidelines on the AG’s Web site regarding the OML and found indeed agenda items that are written with such a lack of specificity were a violation.

I wasn’t trying to play “gotcha” and sent the superintendent the AG’s guidelines and my concerns before the meeting so that it could be corrected. Needless to say it wasn’t corrected. When I raised the issue again at the board meeting, it was dismissed with a “that’s how we’ve always done it attitude,” and since I was new I didn’t know any better.

I did get a commitment from counsel that this issue would be corrected the next time it came up. The July 2 (written on that date, but received on July 5) AG letter states:

“The resolution agreed to by Trustee Enge and counsel for the Board was appropriate and it showed the public an exemplary degree of openness regarding Board business and a commendable cooperativeness between counsel and Trustee Enge which arrived at a solution to the problem.”

I do have a great deal of respect for the district’s counsel and don’t expect this issue will come up again. The AG letter supports my contentions and after citing the applicable statutes concludes:

“Applying the foregoing rules for use and preparation of agenda items, the Board’s use of ‘Adoption of policies and bylaws’ is far too generic and not reasonably calculated to inform the public of which policies and bylaws are to be considered.”

The AG letter further notes that their letter should serve as “guidelines” and there was not a formal violation because an agreement was reached at the meeting to correct future items and also because it took them more than the statutory 120 days to respond.

Ann Bednarski had a letter to the editor published Sunday about the matter and response from the Office of the Attorney General. You can read her letter by clicking here. Her letter is last among the many listed.

Joe Enge
Carson City School Board Trustee

The United States is a nation of laws: badly written and randomly enforced.
Frank Zappa

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A Crack at Real Choice in Education

The Nevada Connections Academy will expand opportunity
By Joe Enge
 
Choice for education in Nevada has long been greatly lacking. A small number of charter schools have existed, but they have been constantly and purposefully exposed and limited — for the best interests of the establishment, not the students.

Now, however, there is a major crack in the dike.

The Nevada Connections Academy (NCA), a new distance charter school for Silver State residents, was approved by the Nevada Board of Education in early March.

The school begins serving students this August and is now accepting applications for those entering grades 4-11. Grade 12 is scheduled to be offered in 2008-09.

NCA is one of a number of online public schools now operated in different states by the national Connections Academy organization, which describes itself as “a leading national provider of high quality, highly accountable K-12 virtual public schools operated in partnership with charter schools and school districts.”

“Connections Academy schools,” says a company statement, “deliver top-quality, personalized education for students that combines certified teachers; a proven, print-rich curriculum; technology tools; and community experiences to create a supportive and successful environment for children who need an individualized approach to education.”

During the 2006-07 school year, Connections Academy schools served students in Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Indiana, Minnesota, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

NCA staffers will be meeting with interested Nevada parents and conducting in-person information sessions around the state beginning July 23 and ending August 15. According to an online announcement, the cities visited will be Sparks, Yerington, Henderson, Laughlin, Las Vegas, Pahrump, Winnemucca, Elko, Carson City and Reno, in that order. Also scheduled are online virtual-meeting info sessions from July 20 through August 20. More specific details can be found at the Nevada Connections Academy website, which is part of www.connectionsacademy.com .

For too long, Nevada public education has operated with a “take it or leave it” attitude. This has meant that many parents, if not satisfied with the establishment’s provision of education, have been forced into either home school or private school — both at great personal cost. Now, technology, foresight, and vision have evolved to the point that families in Nevada have another option.

Although competition and choice are anathema to the establishment, it apparently found itself — like the Soviets facing the realities of their system’s failure — compelled to acknowledge a good concept that will embrace and individualize student needs.

The technology to provide education to any and all in this fashion has been around for years. What blocked it was a system that says “think outside of the box,” but at the same time feared if anyone really did.

With the approval of NCA as Nevada’s newest charter school, institutional thinking outside the box has now occurred. As a parent, former teacher, and current public school board member, I recognize the more options provided in education the better. Though I’ve tried to cut through the “take it or leave it” attitude in public schools, so far I’ve not had much success. The reason is that the key ingredient of competition has been missing.

I am personally forwarding NCA’s contact information to parents dissatisfied with my own school district, because I want what is best for the students. Even school board members cannot cut through the arrogant attitudes of administrators who know there are few other options available to their involuntary clients: the parents and students.

Any and all who claim to wrap themselves around the “it’s for the children” concept need to be challenged about choice. Pass the word and recommend Nevada Connections Academy. As a parent, I want options. As a teacher, I welcome competition. As a school board member, I see first-hand the smug “you don’t have options” attitude — that needs a really serious kick in the backside.

As Nevada Connections Academy opens its doors, we all need to appreciate the dedication that this achievement entailed and be ready to defend the educational options it provides.

We have two obligations: to pass the word and to defend, for surely the empire will strike back. The sooner we recognize that options and opportunities for parents and students are good things, the quicker we’ll see real improvement in our students’ performance and results.

Joe Enge is education policy analyst at the Nevada Policy Research Institute.

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Lesson in Education

Nevadans won’t settle for business-as-usual placebos like full-day kindergarten
By Joe Enge
 
In a mad rush to jack up education spending by more than $1 billion during the 2007 legislative session — without any serious and badly needed education reforms involving choice or accountability — Nevada’s education establishment tripped over the rock of reality and stumbled head on into a pronounced credibility gap.

While most media reports painted the session’s outcome regarding education as a balanced “compromise,” the reality is that the state’s insatiable behemoth was left stunned, trudging away with only $63 million in additional funding above Gov. Gibbons’ proposed budget. 

General fund spending for K-12 ended up at $2.2 billion, or, when non-general funds are added to the Distributive School Account (DSA), $2.67 billion. The governor proposed a 13-percent increase, then accepted an 18-percent compromise. Instead of the $186 million sought for full-day kindergarten, proponents came away with $15 million. 

Such a result was not predictable a year ago as the drumbeat and chants were building to blindly increase education spending under rosy state budget predictions. An expensive and inherently flawed adequacy study with predetermined results was touted in the run-up to the session, and the study’s predictable call for a massive increase was echoed by the Nevada State Board of Education. Then the state’s 17 school boards and 17 superintendents unanimously jumped on the bandwagon with their proposed “iNVest 07” plan calling for $1 billion in increased spending. “We’re asking for programs, not money,” they told lawmakers. But did anybody really buy that?

The false assumptions of the adequacy study were exposed during an August 2006 presentation to the Interim Education Committee. Testifying for the Nevada Policy Research Institute, the esteemed education analyst Dr. Richard P. Phelps and I made clear that, despite its seemingly impressive volume of numbers and statistics, the adequacy study’s invalid premises made its numbers irrelevant and unusable. The study briefly popped its head up again during the early session but, thanks again to NPRI testimony, suffered the fate of the resident pest in the whack-a-mole game, never to be heard from again.

The push for full-day kindergarten received its first challenge during NPRI’s pre-session testimony in November 2006. The challenge clearly took full-day kindergarten advocates by surprise, exposing their lack of familiarity with the voluminous array of studies that shred claims of universal academic benefits for full-day kindergarten programs. Proponents clearly had not done their homework, banking instead on the chorus effect to drown out any potential objections. That proved to be a major mistake, as the counter-evidence NPRI offered spoke to not only the flaws in proponents’ claims, but their lack of academic honesty as well.

Things grew even worse for the establishment on the credibility front when the Clark County School District tried in February 2007 to finesse a “study” they claimed proved the academic benefits of full-day kindergarten programs. But state Sen. Bob Beers called them on some key missing data. When finally provided, it revealed that full-day kindergarten students who were not “at-risk” actually performed worse by the second grade than their half-day counterparts. The new governor, too, helped Nevadans see through the smoke and mirrors with his opposition to universal compulsory full-day kindergarten.

A statewide decline in projected budget revenues brought the hammer down on full-day pre-school, yet Assembly Speaker Barbara Buckley & Co. clung to it as though it were public education’s Holy Grail. As the session neared its end, preposterous assertions, political rhetoric and hyperbole filled the air — advocates’ last refuge amid an absence of supporting research and funds.

“Buckley contended some inmates might not have ended up in prison if they had received a better start to education with full-day kindergarten,” reported Ed Vogel of the Las Vegas Review-Journal May 4. “Her comment sparked a response from Joe Enge, a member of the Carson City School Board and an education analyst for the Nevada Policy Research Institute. ‘I am not aware of one study that shows investing in all-day kindergarten will make any impact on the incarceration rate,’ Enge said. He said the Nevada education system’s problems occur at the secondary level, not in early grades.”

The lesson of the 2007 legislature is that the public wants substantial education reform and won’t settle for the expensive, business-as-usual “feel good” placebos that the full-day kindergarten push epitomized. 

Until sound policy objectives — such as Sen. Barbara Cegavske’s bills to restructure the state education system (SB 540) and provide choice for special needs students (S.B. 158) — are taken seriously, the establishment’s budget-expansion balloons will continue to be popped.
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Shades of Julius Caesar in empowerment plan

The LEAPS plan is designed to destroy Gov. Gibbons' empowerment proposal
By Joe Enge
 
It was the same date, centuries ago, when a man popular to the people and dangerous to the elites walked through the Roman forum to the Senate. He would not be returning. It was the Ides of March and conspirators lay in wait.

On the Ides of March this year in Carson City, State Sens. Steven Horsford and Dina Titus unveiled their LEAPS, or Local Empowerment and Accountability for Public Schools, plan.

It is designed to do for Gov. Jim Gibbons' empowerment proposal what senators did for Gaius Julius Caesar on March 15, 44 B.C.

Presenting themselves as "friends" of decentralization for public schools, Horsford and Titus have introduced Senate Bill 304, which would maintain the status quo with only the show and shadow of change.

Under the bill, a school's application for the Horsford-Titus version of decentralization would have to be designed by a team almost half of whose members must be union members. As for the "parent" and "business" elements on the team, no criteria would ensure that they would be other than straw men.

Yet, even such a system-friendly "design team" still faces numerous obstacles to becoming a "local empowerment and accountability school." Under the guise of accountability, the LEAPS process is purposefully designed to fail. Even if approved, the school must go through the entire process once again in three years, and district school boards can yank schools' supposed "empowered" status whenever they might have the whim.

Does this mean that no schools will apply for the status? Actually, no. The districts need to appear to be doing something, so properly connected and controlled schools will be given the green light. Having a few schools so designated will give the proper public appearance of reform — while not threatening the education powers that be.

Have we seen this before? Yes. Nevada's approach to charter school regulation is structured the same way. Only 19 charter schools exist in Nevada, while Arizona, by contrast, has over 500. LEAPS is designed to do to empowerment schools what the school administration-union alliance for years has been doing to Nevada's charter schools. The ed establishment is well practiced at perverting good ideas that would benefit students but might threaten the power structure.

Sean Whaley reported in the Las Vegas Review-Journal that, "Senate Minority Leader Dina Titus, D-Las Vegas, said unlike the program proposed by Gibbons, the Democratic plan does not require $60 million in funding and accomplishes empowerment from the ground up, not from the top down."
We should be thankful President Lincoln didn't use such a ground-up approach to freeing the slaves. Emancipation in education is badly needed. That is apparent to most. There is definite momentum for educational reform in Nevada.

Sen. Horsford was quoted as saying, "Empowerment is not a program; it is a process." He has it backwards. Real empowerment, as proposed by Gov. Gibbons, is a program. LEAPS on the other hand is all "process" — purposefully designed to bury a good idea before it becomes too popular with the masses.

Et tu, Bruté?

Joe Enge is education policy analyst at the Nevada Policy Research Institute. This op-ed first appeared in the March 28 Reno Gazette-Journal.

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Battle for Control

The governor’s lack of influence has contributed significantly to our state’s education problems
By Joe Enge
Liberty Watch Magazine 

Nevada currently finds itself in a bizarre situation in which both everyone and no one are simultaneously in charge of the state’s public K-12 education system. Senate Bill 540 was heard by the upper chamber’s Committee on Finance on the “do or die” day of Friday, April 13. However, because of its importance, this was exempted from the deadline. This legislation is big — really big. It calls for the complete restructuring and overhaul of the apparatus charged with governing K-12 public education in Nevada. 

The centerpiece of that apparatus, the State Board of Education, received blistering criticisms from Senate Majority Leader Bill Raggio last month. “Dysfunctional,” “inaction” and “lack of leadership,” were just a few of his descriptions.

In essence, said the Senator, enough is enough. He recounted the lamentable history of the state board as an institution, while pointedly emphasizing the Legislature’s constitutional responsibility for the condition of Nevada education.

Raggio noted that major frustrations with the board surfaced 10 years ago during another period of reform attempts. Then, even the Democrat-controlled Assembly and Democratic Gov. Bob Miller wanted to abolish the board. But, said Raggio, his actions prevented that at the time. It was clear from his tone on April 13, however, that since 1997 the state Board of Education has not redeemed itself in his eyes.

It’s a view that most close observers share. The current state education structure is an inefficient and impotent labyrinth, a giant bog where even the most sensible reform ideas vanish from sight. Numerous state education committees have been formed by previous legislative sessions and governors because of a lack of confidence in the state board.

Such needs for a work-around system, said Raggio, grow directly out of the dysfunctional nature of the board and the Nevada Department of Education (NDOE) atop which it sits. By noting the board’s present problems are “a situation of their own making," the Senator signaled that the state board’s failures can no longer be swept under the rug.

So, what is on the table? Under SB540, the board would be given an advisory role, the state superintendent would be appointed by the governor and the state Department of Education would get more authority — and accountability. A division of accountability would be created in the department, with both fiscal and academic oversight authority.

Nevada’s current education structure is plagued by a lack of gubernatorial authority, testified Sen. Barbara Cegavske. The governor’s lack of influence has contributed, quite significantly, to our state’s education problems, she said.

This restructuring — badly needed and long overdue — should provide that influence. The current system unduly compromises the state superintendent of instruction, who is appointed by the board, yet answers to various other commissions and committees. Once appointed by the governor, the superintendent position will have a direct line of accountability, empowering the position. Then voters will know who to hold accountable for policy leadership, direction and action.

Seeing the handwriting on the wall, State Board of Education member Dr. John Gwaltney and Terry Hickman, Executive Director of the Nevada State Education Association (the teachers’ union), attempted to delay the juggernaut heading toward them. 

Testifying, they took a “this is too complicated to act upon without further study” line. Hickman’s testimony, especially, exposed the teachers’ union as a defender — and prime beneficiary — of the current dysfunctional status quo. 

Raggio apparently found both of them unpersuasive. “If you don’t want to deal with something,” he said, “you study, study and study.”

A streamlined, accountable state superintendent position and Department of Education under the governor — the structure in many other states — would benefit the many rather than the special interests of a select few.

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Legislator voices frustration

Governor's budget shorts public schools, assemblywoman contends
By Ed Vogel
Las Vegas Review-Journal
CARSON CITY -- Assembly Speaker Barbara Buckley, D-Las Vegas, questioned why the state can find money for prison inmates when it does not have funds to expand the full-day kindergarten program to all eligible children.

She told the Assembly Ways and Means Committee that the state spends about $20,000 a year to incarcerate each prisoner and has been asked by the governor to support $300 million in new prison construction.

In contrast, she said, to offer each kindergartner a full day of class would cost $2,400 per student.

That money has not been included in Gov. Jim Gibbons' proposed $6.8 billion general fund state budget.

She said Gibbons has proposed spending just $13 million on new programs for public schools.

"What does that say about our priorities?" she asked. "That is not putting education first."

Buckley contended some inmates might not have ended up in prison if they had received a better start to education with full-day kindergarten.

Her comment sparked a response from Joe Enge, a member of the Carson City School Board and an education analyst for the Nevada Policy Research Institute.

"I am not aware of one study that shows investing in all-day kindergarten will make any impact on the incarceration rate," Enge said.

He said the Nevada education system's problems occur at the secondary level, not in early grades.

Buckley called on the committee to make a financial commitment to education but acknowledged the state does not have extra revenue.

"I don't know how much money we will have. We know the situation is bleak."

The state Economic Forum on Tuesday issued a report on state revenue that requires that the government cut at least $74 million from the governor's proposed budget.

The committee took no vote on Assembly Bill 157, Buckley's bill that calls for spending $73 million to start full-day kindergarten in all 340 elementary schools in Nevada in the 2008-09 school year.

Full-day kindergarten now is offered in 114 "at-risk" schools, those where more than 55 percent of students qualify for free or reduced cost lunches.

A decision on the bill probably will not come before legislative leaders and Gibbons can agree on a compromise that involves Buckley's bill and the governor's proposal to establish 100 empowerment schools.

Democrats oppose Gibbons' bill because it proposes funding the empowerment schools by taking $60 million going to a retirement program for teachers.

In an interview earlier Thursday, Assembly Education Committee Chairwoman Bonnie Parnell, D-Carson City, predicted that both sides will give a little and agree to a partial expansion of full-day kindergarten and add some empowerment schools.

Assembly Minority Leader Garn Mabey, R-Las Vegas, and Senate Human Resources Committee Chairman Maurice Washington, R-Sparks, expressed similar comments.

Clark County Superintendent Walt Rulffes said 11,000 of the 23,000 kindergarten students in his district already attend full-day classes.

"Some people believe it is a waste of time after the third or fourth grade," he added. "I think that is nonsense."

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Changing Our Ways

Why can’t we apply other countries’ successful vocational education programs to our situation in Nevada?
By Joe Enge
 
Anyone who has ever taught overseas can’t help but recognize the self-serving, idiosyncratic nature of the American public-education system compared to those in other countries. For too long, our educational establishment has stubbornly declined to entertain any fresh idea that might threaten the status quo. It’s a shame, given that many of those new ideas have the potential to bring true excellence to Nevada education and long-term benefits to our youth. 

One such important re-thinking is being advocated by Dr. Robert Schmidt, president of the Theodore Roosevelt Institute of Las Vegas. He appeared before the state Senate Human Resources and Education Committee March 23 to give a presentation on career and technical education (CTE), and offered important substance and vision — commodities often lacking in legislative discourse on Nevada education.

Speaking in support of Dr. Schmidt’s approach to CTE was Norm Dianda, owner of Q&D Construction and a founding sponsor of Reno’s ACE charter school — a practical and highly successful CTE model that should be replicated statewide. I also appeared, representing the Nevada Policy Research Institute, a free-market think tank based in Las Vegas. 

Dr. Schmidt reviewed for senators several highly successful vocational and technical education programs in other countries, then applied the concepts to our situation in Nevada. An analysis that Dr. Schmidt wrote recently for NPRI, titled “Teaching the Forgotten Half,” is a must read for anyone genuinely interested in saving Nevada’s high schools.

Over the decades, American public-school educators have made several unfortunate compromises that have resulted in students being properly prepared neither for college nor for the workforce. The frustration felt by employers such as Mr. Dianda at the lack of qualified young job applicants demonstrates the major disconnect between the public education system and the need and desire of many students to be well schooled in CTE. Nevada’s exceedingly high college remediation rates, even for Millennium Scholars, further confirm how short our high schools are falling.

Until we address the failure of the state’s academic/CTE compromise, Nevada public schools will remain incapable of preparing students for the future, no matter how much we spend. When the frustration level of business leaders such as Mr. Dianda reaches the point where they must form their own schools — as it has — it’s well past time for lawmakers and public education leaders to pay attention.

Nevada’s 19th Century model of education is not appropriate for the 21st Century. The class-struggle model of defining workers as “blue” or “white” collar is no longer relevant, and the elitist bias that pushes all students down the college path does all of them a disservice.

Dr. Schmidt gave the Committee some startling statistics to chew on. Of the 66 percent of students who are encouraged to go to college, 31 percent leave college with zero credits. This is not only a waste of time for the students, but a major waste of taxpayer money. (Remember, taxpayers foot the bill for these failures). The remediation rates are staggering — 46 percent for four-year colleges and 64 percent for two-year colleges. After 10 years, only 37 percent obtain a degree and 43 percent of college graduates report underemployment two years later.

Said Schmidt, “The ‘three Rs’ for education should be Rigor as all children need the chance to succeed at challenging classes; Relevance as courses and projects must spark student interest and relate clearly to their lives in today’s world; and Relationships as all students need adult mentors who know them, look out for them and push them to achieve.”

The first step should be to stop treating CTE as the red-headed step-child of public education. Students engaged in CTE programs see an increase in academic achievement and have low drop-out rates because their learning is made relevant. 

Let’s give Nevada’s students the same opportunity for a rewarding and productive future that is available to students in other parts of the world.

“The ‘three Rs’ for education should be Rigor ... Relevance ... and Relationships.” 
—Dr. Robert Schmidt, President of the Theodore Roosevelt Institute of Las Vegas
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