The summer training focuses on preparing educators for handling classrooms in which students break down in small groups for something called differentiated instruction, essentially tailoring assignments to pupils’ various academic levels.
A quick google might have told Malinconico that differentiated instruction is neither new nor secret.
What else? Well, some classrooms get a second teacher to focus on students in need of extra help. And they've increased ELA instruction from two to three hours.
Parents touted the high expectations, including the classrooms named for various colleges.
Malinconico did note that while the Paterson district has 16% of students with disabilities and 29.3% with English language difficulties, the charter student population shows 5% and 10.6% respectively. Charter advocates shrug and say, "Open enrollment."
Malinconico might have looked at other features of CAPS, like the "astonishing" taxpayer-funded salaries they pay their executives, or the sweet deal in which they lease their own facilities from a related third party (taxpayers fund that, too). But no--this puff piece is just about their secret sauce.
So the secret sauce? More hours on tested subjects. More teacher supports. Fewer students who are harder to teach.
I don't fault the school--it's doing what it should do, which is use the best tools it can lay its hands on to help its students achieve.
But we are well past the point where anyone should be providing this kind of superficial credulous coverage. It's a school. There are no silver bullets, no secret sauce, no miracle formula, and every single person on the planet, including journalists, should know better. Educating students is long hard steady work with lots of grind and very little flash. And no miracles.
"But we are well past the point where anyone should be providing this kind of superficial credulous coverage. It's a school. There are no silver bullets, no secret sauce, no miracle formula, and every single person on the planet, including journalists, should know better."
ReplyDeleteAre you really that obstinate ? There are 90,000+ school districts in this country. Do you not accept that some schools teach better than others ? Instead, you try to attribute everything to some small differences in disabled kids (16% vs 5%).
I have no axe to grind (other than being raised in NJ). But keep in mind the alternative. At Patterson HS, only 71% of the students graduate. This isn't about a standardized test upon which you place very little importance. Is it just possible that some schools teach better and do a better job in helping their kids graduate ? And if so, maybe you can understand why many families would gravitate to such an alternative rather than continuing a cycle of failure ?
Are some schools better than others? Sure. Is it because of some secret sauce. No. Is this school notably better than other schools in Pattison? No. Are there any signs that they have discovered some secret sauce, silver bullet, or miracle formula? No.
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