Posted on 07/14/2011 1:54:35 PM PDT by Kaslin
Benjamin Franklin said, Sin is not hurtful because it is forbidden, it is forbidden because it is hurtful.
Someone ought to hang that quote in every doorway of every school and office of the Atlanta Public Schools system.
Last weeks release by GeorgiaGov. Nathan Deal of an investigative report on widespread cheating within APS on the states standardized curriculum tests raises more questions than it answers.
How did a school system the size of Atlantas establish such pervasive unethical habits? Apparently some 178 educators, including 38 principals, are named as perpetrators of this educational fraud, and more than 80 have confessed to their roles in the scoring scam. Cheating took place in 44 of the 56 schools examined in the investigation.
If cheating by teachers, administrators and even the superintendent of schools is occurring with impunity in a major metropolitan school district, where else is it happening? Officials within APS denied for years that cheating was taking place, even as the students scores improved in suspiciously dramatic fashion.
Can parents trust their local school districts claims of improvement in educational results? APS Superintendent Beverly Hall became known as a miracle worker in supposedly turning around a beleaguered school district. She even became part of the Atlanta brand.
Business and civic leaders touted her leadership and the quality of the schools as reasons to bring commerce to the city, yet it appears she may not have actually improved the district at all. There is now little reliable data to make that claim.
Of all the public scandals of the past several years, the APS cheating fiasco is the most egregious in recent memory because it proves that corruption is now standard operating procedure in our civic institutions. Who cares if children are left holding the bag, as long as the powers-that-be get the accolades they seek.
The finger pointing in the wake of this story merely demonstrates how broken our system of public education really is. Teachers blame the reforms instituted in Atlanta several years ago that put the focus on financial incentives for performance rather than teacher tenure.
Administrators blame state and federal governments for tying funding to school performance, which in turn forces schools to teach to the test. (Proving if theres a way to blame former President George W. Bush for anything, folks will do so.)
If Atlanta teachers had been teaching to the test, however, their rampant cheating would have been unnecessary.
Meanwhile, parents dont know who to blame, but theyre not likely to hold their children accountable because, well they hardly ever do, so why start now?
Oddly enough, theres one party no one ever mentions, but who, in my view, is probably the root cause of the decline (and inevitable demise) of our public schools: Weather Underground founder and former University of Illinois at Chicago professor Bill Ayers.
Not just Mr. Ayers, mind you, but he and his cohort of teacher educators who, in the past 40 years, literally hijacked our nations schools for their own progressive purposes.
These days, rather than ensure that rising teachers are masters of their fields (Mr. Ayers has written that subject-matter mastery isnt necessary for teaching), our schools of education train teachers to engage in social justice - and even to teach substantive subjects such as math and science in the context of social consciousness.
When teachers dont view their role as imparting information, knowledge and skills, but rather as preparing students to be agents of social change through critical thinking, its no wonder the kids arent capable of passing standardized tests.
It must be said: We arent training our teachers to do the job we say we want done in our classrooms.
Why, then, are we surprised that they stoop to sin and avarice to achieve success in a job for which they are fundamentally unprepared in the first place?
Teachers are taught “how to teach” instead of being required to show mastery of the subjects they teach.
It isn’t just Atlanta. WDC has an ongoing “investigation” into similar corruption. There are many many school systems with this corruption. These so-called “professional educators” need to have their licenses yanked and they need shunned by society...left to wander America aimlessly. With all the 24 hour days they always purport to put in grading papers and preparing classes you would think they wouldn’t have time to cheat.
We have a winner!!
Wrong! Wrong! Wrong! Government schools have **always** been progressive. The failure merely became unforgivingly evident in the past 40 years!
From their very beginnings in the mid-1800s to early 1900s government schools have **always** been a progressive idea. Teacher training and curriculum development has **always** been under the control of progressives.
Government schools have **always** been socialist-funded, compulsory, and run by the collectivist voting mob ( schools board)! At first they offered the students a lukewarm and generic Protestantism. Is it any wonder then that in the last century citizens grew increasingly lukewarm in their morals and ethics? By the 1960s they were utterly godless! That was the progressive plan from the beginning!
Solution: Socialism, government compulsion, godlessness, and voter mob collectivism can never be reformed. We must move toward abolishing government schools and establishing universal private K-12 schooling.
By the way there are NO NO NO “good” government teachers!
Why?
“The Mythical ‘Good’ Government Teacher Lives in the Land of Unicorns”
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/2744804/posts
They’re cheating everyone else, too.
Post #6, Post of the Day!!
I just saw that you wrote the essay. I am sorry for being so blunt.
The essay is really very good, except for that one point.
One more thing about teacher mastery of the subject material.
1) All teachers should be required to sit side by side with the engineers, science, and math major and pass Calculus I with a “B”. Yes, I know that few teachers need calculus but doing this would assure two things. First, that they had a high IQ to justify being in a classroom, and second, that they did not have a math phobia that they would pass on to their students.
2) All teacher should be required to take and pass ( yearly) the GED for high school drop outs. If they can’t pass that exam they should not be in a classroom. I wonder how many would fail the math portion of the GED?
If I ran a private school this would be the minimum requirement for all of my teachers.
An Ed.D. without an actual subject is an EMPTY degree.
Ed.D. is the bogus “doctorate degree” in “education.”
Is it any more bogus than a degree in “women’s studies” (code words for a degree in Feminazism)?
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