In the forward of William Parrett and Kathleen Budge’s recent book, Turning High-Poverty Schools Into High-Performing Schools, Michael Copland describes standing in front of the faculty in an after-school meeting to discuss data regarding student achievement.
Copland recalls presenting the information on an overhead projector and stoking his colleagues to produce a dialogue that would help him better understand the unsettling gaps in student achievement. To him, the problem seemed blatantly obvious: The needs of the students—who, by the way, came from one of the poorest areas in the district—were not being met.
At this point, the hands of several teachers went up. Although they were bothered by the fact that their students were struggling, Copland noticed a pattern in the faculty’s rhetoric: “How can you expect us to teach our students at the same level as students who come from a middle-class, two-parent household?” Does this sound familiar?
Copland recalls working hard to push the conversation into critical and self-reflective direction, but ultimately, it regressed into scapegoating and blaming students and their socio-economic “maladies” instead of taking ownership for the lag in student achievement.
The general consensus in the room seemed to be that what the school and the teachers needed to “ensure adequate learning growth” was not a more effective approach to teaching, but better students.
The purpose of this “blog” (which is quickly turning into an article) is not to rehash Copland’s or Parrett and Budge’s 220 page argument in its entirety—there’s not enough time or room for that. We would, however, like to emphasize a few of Parrett and Budge’s simple action steps that the authors argue are intimately connected to increased student achievement:
The statistics on the number of failing schools throughout the country and in Michigan puts us on notice that change is necessary if we are to salvage a whole generation of young people. Marygrove College’s Master of Arts in Educational Leadership program online is committed to preparing you to be a leader in this movement.
You should also know that Marygrove College has reduced tuition rates for several online graduate programs by 19 percent! This is one step—amongst a few others—that the college is taking to ensure that a Marygrove education is an achievable, financially-sustainable investment.
Category: blogs
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