1. Welcome! Please take a few seconds to create your free account to post threads, make some friends, remove a few ads while surfing and much more. ClutchFans has been bringing fans together to talk Houston Sports since 1996. Join us!

Texas schools & HISD -- Exposed again

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by SamFisher, Dec 3, 2003.

  1. basso

    basso Contributing Member
    Supporting Member

    Joined:
    May 20, 2002
    Messages:
    29,681
    Likes Received:
    6,370
    Granted, Bloomberg is a RINO, but in this case he's trying to make the schools better and more accountable.

    and bias in the media is not a myth. and i object to any bias, whether liberal or conservative in news reporting. the problem in the Times' case is that it's become one hug Opinion Journal.
     
  2. Jeff

    Jeff Clutch Crew

    Joined:
    Feb 14, 1999
    Messages:
    22,412
    Likes Received:
    361
    Me too.
     
  3. rimbaud

    rimbaud Contributing Member
    Supporting Member

    Joined:
    Nov 3, 1999
    Messages:
    8,169
    Likes Received:
    676
    Here is that article I mentioned earlier...

    Questions on Data Cloud Luster of Houston Schools
    New York Times
    July 11, 2003

    by_ DIANA JEAN SCHEMO
    _

    HOUSTON — When Jerroll Tyler, a sophomore at Sharpstown High School
    here,
    turned 18, he met the full force of Texas' no-nonsense approach to
    education. He received an attendance contract, warning that if he
    missed
    more than two days of school, he was out permanently. By week's end,
    Mr.
    Tyler had caroused his way past the limit.

    Months later, when he showed up to take a state math exam needed for
    graduation, a dean at Sharpstown told him he was no longer enrolled. "I
    went
    home, and I never looked back at school again," Mr. Tyler said.

    Which was why Mr. Tyler and his mother, Karen Gamble, were shocked to
    see
    that Sharpstown High claimed it had no dropouts at all last year. It
    reported, instead, that Mr. Tyler had transferred to Southwest High, a
    charter school he had never even visited. Some 462 other students left
    the
    school that year, and Sharpstown claimed that not one had dropped out.

    Sharpstown was not alone. A recent state audit in Houston, which
    examined
    records from 16 middle and high schools, found that more than half of
    the
    5,500 students who left in the 2000-1 school year should have been
    declared
    dropouts but were not. That year, Houston schools reported that only
    1.5
    percent of its students had dropped out.

    The audit — which recommended lowering the ranking of 14 of the 16
    schools
    from the best to the worst, has been a stunning blow to the Houston
    school
    system, the largest and most celebrated district in Texas. Last year,
    the
    city won a $1 million prize as best urban district in the country, from
    the
    Broad Foundation, which is based in Los Angeles.

    The city has also been a pillar of the so-called Texas miracle in
    education,
    whose emphasis on grading school performance became the model for the
    rest
    of the country under the federal No Child Left Behind Act. It was
    largely on
    the strength of his success here that Rod Paige, Houston's former
    superintendent, followed George W. Bush east to become secretary of
    education.

    Now, some here are questioning whether the miracle may have been smoke
    and
    mirrors, at least on the high school level. And they are suggesting
    that
    perhaps Houston is a model of how the focus on school accountability
    can
    sometimes go wrong, driving administrators to alter data or push
    students
    likely to mar a school's profile — through poor attendance or low test
    scores — out the back door.

    "It was Enron accounting," said Joseph Rodriguez, a former employee of
    the
    district's office of research and accountability, who is running for an
    open
    seat on the Houston school board. "Who are our dropouts? We haven't
    identified them."

    Dr. Paige, who ran the Houston system from 1994 to early 2001, declined
    to
    directly address questions about the undercounting of dropouts. Dan
    Langan,
    a spokesman, said, "The secretary stands by his record of
    accomplishment in
    Texas."

    Mr. Langan said "Dr. Paige has a very strong record of success in
    education
    reform in Houston" and had "promoted a culture of accountability."

    The state audit, issued last month, recommended that the whole Houston
    school system be ranked "unacceptable."

    Houston school officials are appealing the proposed reclassifications,
    saying that the problem was not large-scale fraud but sloppy record
    keeping.
    Under Texas' system for reporting dropouts, schools are supposed to
    enter
    one of several dozen codes when students leave, and must have proof
    that
    students did not drop out but left, for example, to attend another
    school.

    The state audit said that 3,000 of the 5,500 folders examined did not
    contain sufficient evidence, like student signatures, to prove that
    students
    were continuing their educations. The students should therefore be
    reclassified as dropouts, it said.

    In an e-mail message to state officials obtained by The New York Times,
    one
    auditor noted that many students who had left school were coded as
    intending
    to enroll in an alternative or high school equivalency program, and
    were, by
    Texas rules, not dropouts. But the coding was often based on little
    more
    than a statement by a school principal.

    "If it was permissible for school officials to declare intent for a
    student,
    they could state anything they please and we would be obliged to accept
    their word as verification," wrote the auditor, L. T. Bailey. "A school
    official may witness, record or `document' the expressed intent of the
    parent, guardian, adult student, but they cannot supplant that choice."

    Kaye Stripling, Houston's superintendent of schools, noted in the
    city's
    appeal that a private audit of Houston schools, based on records from
    the
    2001-2 school year, disputed only half as many records as the state
    review
    did using the earlier records. Because Houston is making progress, Dr.
    Stripling contended, it should not be punished.

    The Houston system's supporters in the business community, some with
    close
    ties to the Bush administration, maintain that the city's dropout
    figures
    have long defied credibility but do not compromise the state's
    educational
    achievements.

    "The Texas miracle was not about high school performance, it was about
    elementary school performance," said Donald R. McAdams, an 11-year
    member of
    the Houston school board and author of the 2000 book "Fighting to Save
    Our
    Urban Schools. . .and Winning! Lessons from Houston."

    Debbie Graves Ratcliffe, a spokeswoman for the Texas Education Agency,
    which
    oversees the state's public schools, said that the state recognized the
    shortcomings of its method for calculating dropouts and that it was
    adopting
    a more stringent federal definition. In the 2004-5 school year, Ms.
    Ratcliffe said, Texas will begin judging schools by graduation rates,
    not
    dropout rates.

    The state's inquiry here began after a local television station, KHOU,
    reported in February that Sharpstown had falsified dropout records. An
    assistant principal at the school, Robert Kimball, said he had assigned
    an
    employee to contact some 30 students who he mistakenly thought had not
    shown
    up for classes in September 2002. In fact, they had left the year
    before.
    Some were attending other schools, but the majority had dropped out.

    When the school reported its dropout figures to the state, however, it
    altered the records to show that none had dropped out. The school
    accused a
    former computer specialist, Kenneth Cuadra, of altering the data, but
    Mr.
    Cuadra has said that he changed the codes under the orders of senior
    administrators at Sharpstown, and that he restored the correct codes
    the
    next morning, after reflecting on the implications of what he had been
    asked
    to do.

    According to records he provided, Dr. Kimball wrote to Sharpstown's
    principal, Carol Wichmann, last November, warning her that the school
    was
    misreporting drop out figures.

    "We go from 1,000 Freshman to less than 300 Seniors with no dropouts,"
    Dr.
    Kimball wrote. "Amazing!" The school went on to officially report that
    it
    had no dropouts, insisting even after a district official questioned
    the
    claim at a school with "74.7 of the students at risk."

    Dr. Wichmann did not respond to a request for comment, but in an
    interview
    with KHOU this year, she maintained that the school truly had no
    dropouts.
    The school has formally charged Mr. Cuadra with falsifying the data,
    which
    he denies.

    To Rick Noriega, a state representative who once ran a dropout
    prevention
    program, the claim of zero dropouts was infuriating. He requested the
    state
    audit.

    "My whole concern about this is that we are in denial about the
    severity of
    the problem," Mr. Noriega said.

    In Texas, schools are judged based on standardized examination scores,
    attendance and dropout rates. At Sharpstown, the entire staff received
    cash
    bonuses for the school's performance the year Jerroll Tyler said he was
    forced out.

    In a third of Houston's 30 high schools, scores on the standardized
    exams
    have risen as enrollment has shrunk. At Austin High, for example, 2,757
    students were enrolled in the 1997-1998 school year, when only 65
    percent
    passed the 10th grade math test, an important gauge of school success
    in
    Texas. Three years later, 99 percent of students passed the math exam,
    but
    enrollment shrank to 2,215 students. The school also reported that
    dropout
    figures had plummeted 92 percent, to 0.3 percent from 4.1 percent.

    Dr. Kimball, in an interview here, said that many schools had assistant
    principals who act as "bouncers," pushing students who show up late to
    school or are frequently absent to quit. In addition, schools may hold
    back
    9th graders who do poorly on a pre-test for the 10th grade math exam,
    producing an artificial "9th grade bulge" in student enrollment, Dr.
    Kimball
    said. Studies have demonstrated that students who are left back are
    more
    likely to drop out.

    "You're driving kids out that will skew your test scores," Mr. Noriega
    said.

    Clement Nduli, an immigrant from Zaire, reported to 9th grade homerooms
    for
    two years, though his report card shows he took 10th grade courses the
    second year. Next month, he is to enter 11th grade.

    "I was in 9th grade, 9th grade, then 11," said Mr. Nduli. "They tell me
    it
    doesn't matter."

    Michael Scott, a senior at Sharpstown last year, failed the math
    examination
    six times and ultimately could not graduate. He and his mother, Annette
    Small, fault the school for not giving him any math courses in his
    senior
    year to help him pass. Nevertheless, Sharpstown reported Michael Scott
    as
    one of its graduates.

    "Michael has a right to have an education and a function as a young
    black
    man in society, and they took that away from him," Ms. Small said.

    Mr. Tyler, the Sharpstown dropout, says it was "a miracle" that turned
    him
    around, so that now he works as a certified long distance mover with
    his
    father. An aunt and uncle took him in, offering the steadiness he
    needed to
    grow. "They taught me how to listen," he said.

    Still, his mother said she was disgusted by the revelations about
    Sharpstown
    administrators who concealed the true fate of its students.

    "They're teaching the kids to abide by the rules," Ms. Gamble said,
    "but
    they don't follow the rules themselves."
     
  4. mrpaige

    mrpaige Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Feb 5, 2000
    Messages:
    8,831
    Likes Received:
    15
    There have been articles over the past couple of years talking about how the Dallas ISD also far undercounts drop-outs. Perhaps that's another one of those "this is just how we do it 'round here" things that affects a lot of Texas districts.

    While I can understand the desire to paint a pretty face on a problem, it seems to me that it's impossible to properly address the problem (and drop-outs are a problem) unless you have a way to accurately see how large the problem really is.

    But I guess since rankings and funding and all sorts of other things get mixed up in it, it doesn't pay to be honest and address the problems. Better to pretend they just don't exist and finesse the numbers to fit that illusion.
     

Share This Page

  • About ClutchFans

    Since 1996, ClutchFans has been loud and proud covering the Houston Rockets, helping set an industry standard for team fan sites. The forums have been a home for Houston sports fans as well as basketball fanatics around the globe.

  • Support ClutchFans!

    If you find that ClutchFans is a valuable resource for you, please consider becoming a Supporting Member. Supporting Members can upload photos and attachments directly to their posts, customize their user title and more. Gold Supporters see zero ads!


    Upgrade Now