Part II of Louisiana’s Phony Graduation Standards
The extremely low passing scores on high school required courses adopted in secret by our Department of Education have made it the official policy of our Department of Education to give students credit for courses even though they know only a fraction of the information taught in those courses!A simple calculation, taking into account the multiple choice nature of the majority of most end-of-course tests indicates that it is possible for a student to pass these tests by knowing as little as 10 to 20% of the tested material.
The general public in Louisiana has been led to believe that
the reason we give end-of-course tests in certain required subjects is that we
cannot trust the teachers to maintain high standards in the awarding of course credit. Therefore the state has
to double check the teachers and make certain that our diplomas are worth
something. Actually the opposite is true. Many teachers are complaining that
they are now being pressured by the state to pass almost every student
regardless of effort and knowledge. The extremely low passing scores on state tests
put pressure on teachers to pass students who have made very little effort. High School school performance scores depend heavily on the graduation rate, so schools are handing diplomas out like candy. I don't blame the local schools. This policy is coming form the top.
Do you think that a teacher would ever be allowed to openly
give a passing grade to a student who got only 32% of the questions right on her/his final test. Yet schools are allowed and even encouraged to pass students
who get that low a score on the Geometry end-of-course test. The other cut scores in Algebra, English II, and English III, are not much higher. Since the minimum passing scores are secret,
all the teacher is told is that the student has passed the state end-of-course
test and therefore must know enough material to pass the course. No wonder our graduates
are flunking out of college in record numbers! (See part I of this story below)
Phony College Enrollment Numbers
What about Louisiana’s increase in college enrollment numbers? Some of our high schools are boosting the enrollment of their graduates in college. There are charter schools that actually require their graduates to register for college as part of their graduation procedure. But unfortunately college enrollment is not the same as matriculation to college.
College registrars are telling us that about 30% of those college enrollees nationwide never even show up for classes in the fall. This phenomenon is called
“summer melt” and it demonstrates that Louisiana’s highly touted college
enrollment increases for many of our high schools are purely illusionary.
Students
from the Louisiana Recovery District that average 16.4 on the ACT do not get TOPS or college
scholarships and most don’t have the money to register or pay for housing at a
college. They may be enrolled at the end of their senior year, but they never
show up for registration. This is just another example of the faux dramatic improvement
that has been released to the cooperative news media by John White's crack PR team just ahead of the upcoming BESE elections.
All this manufactured good news is meant to help reelect the John White faction
of BESE.
Phony Credit Recovery Courses
Mandatory Attendance Ignored
I met with John White a couple of years ago and pointed out to him that some of the computerized Course Choice courses have no daily attendance roll taken, like we do in regular schools. Also I pointed out that a student can sign on to computer lessons daily and then go off site and play video games. He responded that he trusted the providers to monitor student progress, and that his philosophy was that quality instruction time was more important than actual time in class. Well I have seen numerous studies that show that the students who often miss school are much more likely to flunk out or drop out than the ones who attend school regularly.
I believe that these so called "reforms" and phony standards are setting up our students for failure in
college, in careers, and in life. We are teaching kids
that they don’t have to earn anything with hard work and dedication. We are
teaching them that if they fail, it must be the teacher’s fault. No wonder
employers are shocked by the lack of motivation of many of these graduates.
Many employers will tell you that a young employee really does not need to be
highly skilled to be successful in a job. He just needs to show up for work on
time every day, pass a drug test, and be motivated enough to learn on the job. We are sending them young people who expect a
paycheck but don’t think they have to work for it!
I’m not advocating with this post that we flunk more kids
out of high schools. I am just advocating that we stop lying about our phony
rigorous standards. It was extremely foolish and even harmful to try to prepare
all students for college in the first place. It was done because our ambitious
but unqualified education leaders wanted to claim that they could get more kids
to college just by mandating it. But what has really happened is that our
college prep courses have been watered down so that more lazy, unmotivated
students could be awarded a high school diploma. As a result, our students are failing and dropping out of college in record numbers. This is not the fault of the
teachers. Many teachers have simply resigned from teaching in recent years out of frustration because they cannot stand to be part of this hypocrisy.
At the same time that Louisiana has watered down the
teaching of college prep courses, we have basically killed our
vocational-technical programs in high school. Now all of a sudden White has
decided to promote Jump Start to get more kids ready for non-college type
careers. After years of stigmatizing the vocational-technical career pathways,
now the Baton Rouge Area Chamber is complaining that our schools are not
producing students trained in technical, construction, and service areas.
Employers cannot fill jobs in our growing economy with local high school graduates who have career and technical training. So now
the Chamber is starting a campaign to de-stigmatize skilled career pathways. This is
what "Louisiana believes” our phony, unqualified, non-educator leaders have done to Louisiana
education.