Please feel free to skip this rant about advanced learning
It's been a while, but I've been feeling an Advanced Learning rant building in me. It got pushed over the edge today when I got thinking about the District's inability to implement MTSS.
For those who prefer to skip rants - and especially rants on this topic - please do skip it.
It would be better to teach the students in a way tailored
to their needs and abilities rather than simply providing the standard
instruction delivered two years early. So far, no one in Seattle Public Schools has shown any interest in even having this discussion, let alone developing a
curriculum (as promised) for HC students. The saving grace is that should any
such curriculum ever be developed, a delivery model is in place to implement it,
the Highly Capable Cohort.
Instruction for HC students must be designed (I would say “re-designed”
but it has yet to be designed a first time) from the ground up, with the needs
and abilities of the students in mind. Until that is done – or at least until
the District decides to do it – there is no point in debating program sites, professional development, eligibility criteria, or anything else. It doesn’t
matter who sits in the car, who drives it, or where we want to go when the car
has no engine.
After underserving HC students in grades 1-8, Seattle Public Schools abandons them completely at grade 9 and offers them nothing at all in high school. The opportunity to see
former classmates in classes and hallways is hardly a cohort. There is no high
school instruction made for them. Access to AP classes is neither HC service nor
a substitute for HC service. It is, again, at best, grade-skipping with a
cohort of grade-skippers. The cohort at Garfield made sense when some high
schools didn’t offer any AP classes at all, but that’s no longer the case. HCC
students can have access to AP classes or Running Start at any school, not just
at Garfield, so continuing the cohort at Garfield only serves tradition. It's not serving students.
Once you describe the problem, the solution becomes obvious:
the District needs to develop a 1-12 HC curriculum designed with the needs of
HC students in mind and the District needs to implement this curriculum across
all HCC sites. You know, just like the District promised to do in 2009 but never did.
Want to know what’s funny? That’s the good news. Yep. The
grossly misguided and inadequate service provided to HC students is the good
news.
The bad news is that this shadow of service is the only
service available. There is no service at all for students who cannot gain
access to HCC. Seattle Public Schools utterly fails to support non-HC students
working beyond Standards through a total refusal to even try.
The Standards, intended as a floor in theory, function in
practice as a ceiling. There is no reliable support provided for students working beyond
Standards. In fact, student work beyond Standards is aggressively discouraged
as it disrupts horizontal and vertical articulation and violates fidelity of
implementation. District officials, school administrators, and some teachers
claim that these students are served through differentiated instruction, but
that is either a total lie or nearly a total lie.
The District claims to offer support for advanced learners
three ways: ALO, Spectrum, and MTSS. They are all false.
ALO is the false promise of differentiated instruction in a
general education classroom. ALO
is a lie. There is no differentiated instruction, or at least not enough to
make a difference. What, if anything, happens for an ALO student that wouldn’t
happen for the same student in the absence of an ALO? What are ALO students
supposed to be taught that is different from what general education students
are supposed to be taught? Nothing. There is no Standard or curriculum for ALO
students. They are not taught anything different from general education
students.
Spectrum used to be delivered in self-contained classrooms. That
was its distinguishing feature. That was how you could tell it from ALOs. No
more. Spectrum students are no longer is one classroom together. Instead, they
are evenly distributed across all of the classrooms in a school. In other
words, Spectrum is now the same as an ALO, which, as we just noted, is the same
as general education. In other words, Spectrum is the same as general
education. Spectrum is a lie. What
are Spectrum students supposed to be taught that is different from what general
education students are supposed to be taught? Nothing. There is no Standard or curriculum for
Spectrum either. It too is no different from general education. If anyone knows
of something done for Spectrum students that wouldn’t be done for those
students in a school without a Spectrum designation, I wish they would tell me
about it.
Spectrum and ALO are completely broken and worthless, but
there’s no need to fix them because the District intends to replace them with
MTSS. Really, could someone in the District just admit that? It’s painfully
obvious, but it would still be a relief if people would just
acknowledge it. MTSS is supposed to provide the structure and resources
needed to facilitate differentiated advanced instruction and codify the process
for reliable delivery. Just one problem: the differentiated lesson that is supposed to be on the shelf and ready for the teacher to use isn’t there. No
one has written the thousands of alternative lessons needed to make this work. Consequently, MTSS is also a lie.
There’s something else working against it: teachers’ need to
differentiate is set by their mission. Their job, they have been told, is to
deliver the grade level curriculum. That’s what they hear like a drumbeat: all of
the pacing guides, Standards, calls for fidelity of implementation, Tier I of MTSS, and talk
about vertical and horizontal articulation tell them that is their job. Teachers
certainly alter the style of their instruction to meet the needs of individual
students, and they will supplement with content below grade level when
necessary for remediation, but they do not commonly supplement with content
beyond grade level to support students who are ready for it because that’s not
part of their mission. The fourth grade teacher is charged with the delivery of
the fourth grade curriculum. For some students they may have to include
elements of the third grade – or even the second grade – curriculum to get that
job done, but it is never necessary for them to include any fifth grade
curriculum to achieve that goal.
Again, once the problem is clearly stated, the solutions are
equally clear. The District needs a curriculum designed to support students
working beyond Standards and they need to charge the teachers with delivering
it. The elements of this curriculum would be the same as the elements of a Spectrum
curriculum if the District ever wrote one. Since the District is preserving the
façade of Spectrum they can even call it the Spectrum curriculum when they
write it and then, when they eliminate Spectrum in favor of MTSS, they will
have a ready-made narrative about how it will be okay because the Spectrum
curriculum will be preserved. The charge to teachers needs to be changed from “Deliver
the grade level curriculum” to “Deliver the right tier of curriculum to each
student in your class”.
In this way MTSS will credibly support students working
beyond grade level in general education classrooms and since teachers are
charged with implementing MTSS, the delivery of an advanced curriculum for
advanced learners could be made reliable. If the curriculum is written and the
teachers are charged with using it, the teachers will deliver the lessons –
even in a general education classroom. In the absence of a curriculum and a
charge there is no chance.
Again, this written curriculum for advanced learners needs
to be something different from grade-skipping. When I first asked about
Spectrum in 2000 no one could describe it for me until I heard it from the fourth
grade Spectrum teacher at Lafayette. He said that Spectrum was supposed to go
deeper, go broader, and go faster. It didn’t necessarily have to go further,
but there wasn’t anything preventing that. As a parent I wasn’t all that
interested in acceleration. I didn’t care if my kids did fifth grade math (or
reading or writing or science or history) in the fourth grade. What I really
wanted was for them to have a more profound understanding of the fourth grade content
(deeper), for them to be able to recognize it and apply it in a wider variety
of contexts (broader), and to be taught at the velocity of their learning
(faster). If the additional learning speed were applied to the deeper and
broader then it didn’t have to go further. I was not impatient for my kids to
get next year’s lessons – they could get those next year. There was no urgency.
The problem is that there is no quick, easy way to document
and measure added depth, breadth, or velocity. There is, however, a quick and
easy way to measure acceleration. All you have to do is check the grade level
on the cover of the textbook. The District is going to have to find a way to
demonstrate depth and breadth of learning and they are going to have to show
that advanced learners will get it thanks to a compacted curriculum.
That’s a trust problem and it is a problem of their own
making. They will have to work very hard to show that they are doing something
different for advanced learners through MTSS.
I suspect this change will reduce the political problems the
District has from Spectrum, though most of those were addressed by dissolving
it. Will families know that some students are getting the MTSS Tier II Advanced
lessons which are different from the MTSS Tier I lessons that their classmates
are getting? How subtle or obvious will it be? Will they think that some
students are getting something better than other students? Are there complaints
like that now about Walk To Math? Will there be a report that will show that 70%
of the students in School A are getting Tier II Advanced while only 15% of the
students in School B are getting it? And if there is such a report, will it
prompt accusations about equitable access? I don’t know.
Comments
Obvious
Send help quick!
Seattle Public Schools does a fair job of delivering highly capable services in grades 1-8.
Nope. Not true. Middle school HCC has been reduced to the opportunity to grade skip in math and science. That's about it.
-success?
The few opportunities that will go to Americans are reserved for the 5% who can afford Bellevue or private schools or private testing to get into HCC, and that is also a feature not a bug. To the people who matter, who control these policies, denying advanced learning to working class and middle class American students is an imperative, not a failure. Nothing will change within the walls of public schools, ever.
- Bulldog Parent
Our school has walk to math ... BUT the only kids who get to walk to a "beyond grade level" class are those kids who are ENROLLED Spectrum students.
Have a kid who is on the wait list ... tough luck ... they aren't enrolled in the program and therefore aren't eligible to receive instruction beyond grade level standards.
As Charlie stated ... the standards are the cap ... not the baseline.
N by NW
Actually, if the car doesn't have an engine but they're going to have to sit in anyway, I'd argue that it matters tremendously who is in it. If the others in the car want to talk about Pokemon or Instagram but you'd rather talk about mathematical proofs or philosophy, it's going to be an ugly "ride."
DisAPPointed
DisAPPointed
Irene
This discussion reminds me of the response I received when I told my oldest's first grade teacher that I thought her school refusal was related to lack of challenge in the classroom. (It's hard to be patient when you're six.) She sent home extra homework. I returned it with a note saying "She's not bored at home."
Requiring advanced learning teachers to receive training in the education of gifted students would solve this problem.
"I hear a lot of talk from families of children with late summer birthdays, who are planning to or have red-shirted kindergarten for a year to make it more likely that their child will qualify for advanced learning opportunities. I have a child turning 5 in Aug and starting kindergarten in the fall. Because I have heard of so many families doing this with advanced learning in mind, I've been a little concerned that there is more to think about than just whether or not your child is ready for kindergarten. But this post on SPS advanced learning makes it sound like all they do is allow children to move up to the next grade levels. Why not just have these kids skip grades? What's the point in holding back kindergarten for a year if you want your child to skip grades in the future? Pretty set on starting my child in kindergarten next fall, but interested in hearing more about why people hold kids back to create more advanced learning opportunities for them. Is this a trend? If a lot of people do it, will it harm children who our age appropriate for their grade, but on the younger side?"
That's a new one for me. I red-shirted my early September birthday kid because otherwise he would have been one of the youngest and shortest in his class for the rest of K-12. I don't regret that at all.
Grading skipping can be problematic even if it seems an easy solution. My impression is the district doesn't like to do it but you could probably make a case. It's certainly not the norm here.
K Teacher
K teacher
The achievement tests for Advanced Learning are grade-normed. The Cognitive Tests are age-normed. We have one child with a summer birthday we red-shirted, and one child with a spring birthday that started on time. Both are in HCC.
I believe red-shirting a child that gets an extra year of rigorous pre-k can help with early HCC qualification on the achievement tests. But more than half the kids qualify for HCC after k, and for those kids the age-normed Cogat is going to be harder to pass because its based on "learned reasoning".
I don’t consider life a “race”. People live a lot longer today than they used to. I believe a red-shirted summer birthday, regardless of HCC, is not a bad option. I was red-shirted, and I don't regret it.
redshirting
We followed the guidelines and let our daughters enter on schedule with their late June and mid-October birthdays. They both seem pretty happy with the results.
I do worry about the lack of direction in Middle School. I know a number of other HCC parents who are thinking about going private at that time. And to answer a question that was posed earlier, I got my kids tested so that they would have options. I got them tested in the hopes that their love of learning wouldn't be squashed in 3rd grade. However, it's because of the dismantling of the Spectrum and lack of direction in Middle School, I had them test again the next year and get into HCC.
Meanwhile, at our middle school where Spectrum has been jettisoned in favor of blended classes with a lot of talk about differentiation, only 38% of teachers say they have sufficient support to actually differentiate instruction. Same number as the entire district. So the whole idea of differentiation is predicated on a system that is unable to support teachers in actually doing it.
Abandon hope
Ignore the problem
I tell families with summer birthdays all the time just to head to New Zealand and start the school year in March. There is really no perfect answer, but I hate to see the limited perspective that many families and Kindergarten teachers bring to the question. As a middle school teacher, I see another effect of redshirting and I hear the regrets that K Teacher hasn't heard. I was determined NOT to redshirt my early September daughter, but we did wonder if we had made the right decision through elementary school. She's now a junior and we have no regrets. In fact, the research bears out that redshirted kids, especially girls, are more prone to depression and risky behavior in the upper grades. Here's an interesting perspective from the New Yorker a few years ago: http://www.newyorker.com/tech/elements/youngest-kid-smartest-kid (note, in NY the cutoff is December 31st, so redshirting happens with fall birthdays...another interesting note to compare to our August 31st system). I say, don't try to game the system...enjoy who your kid is and be happy!
-MS Teacher
@MS Teacher. We had the exact opposite experience than you with our boy in middle school. We wished we had red-shirted him. Academics were harder in the younger grades. In middle school, he was less mature than the other kids and that was hard. In high school it really makes a difference also in sports. I agree that there is no perfect answer, but I would still recommend to parents to have your child wait a year if you have any concerns. We almost had our child wait a year, but were talked out of it by his preschool teacher. It was a mistake. We should have waited.
Another perspective
On time
Middle Child