[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

A Comprehensive Guide To Choosing The Right Protein Powde

3-Time Convicted Violent Criminal Repeatedly Threatened to Kidnap and Kill Judge Cannon and Her Family

Candace Owens: Kamala Harris is not Black Â…

Prof. John Mearsheimer: Israel NOT Going To Win In Lebanon

Iran to destroy all Israel gas fields, power plants at once if Tel Aviv makes mistake: Deputy IRGC chief

Army Vet Calls Out FEMA for Prioritizing Migrants Over Hurricane Victims, Takes Matters Into His Own Hands

Unemployment among 25-34-year-olds with degrees nearly doubles in 4 months

Silver breaks 13-year resistance, signaling potential new secular trend

Two Ukrainian officials found with $6M cash, yet Hurricane Helene victims struggle for aid?

Elite colleges shocked: Students "Don't know how' to read books."

Is Washington's 'high threat' volcano about to blow? Scientists baffled by record spike in earthquakes around Mount Adams

FEMA whistleblowers revealed a treasonous misuse of taxpayer funds.

Exposing how useless FEMA is in Asheville, NC.

Kamala Harris Admin ARRESTED a man for bringing a helicopter full of supplies to Hurricane Helene victims.

MSNBC brings on an anti-Trump impeachment witness, only to be stunned when he announces he's voting for Trump.

She escaped the religious sect she grew up in. Now she says Trump’s MAGA movement is eerily similar

Federal Law REQUIRES Car Makers to MONITOR You

Candace Owens: When are you going to address this, KAMALA?

Democrats Celebrate a Seemingly Impressive September Jobs Report – What They are Not Telling You

The Boiling Point – America Have You Had ‘Enough,’ Yet?

Shopping Malls Implementing Curfews And Teen "Waiting Zones" To Try And Curb Chaos, Theft And Fights

US Public Debt Grew $115 Billion A Day For the Past 3 Days Totaling $345 Billion.

Dramatic Footage Shows Tanker Blown Up In Critical Maritime Chokepoint As Disasters Mount For Biden-Harris

The Remdesivir Papers: Did Service Members Deserve to Die?

“My Blood is Boiling”: Furious Elon Musk Goes Off on FEMA for Blocking SpaceX Engineers from Assisting

“The Stench is Unbearable”: Dead Bodies Piling Up, FEMA Abandons NC Residents Amid Hurricane Helene

Cash and the Constitution

Disaster Relief (INSIDER) Tells Why FEMA Won't Let Citizens Help.

The $212 Billion Dollar Food ingredient poisoning your Brain

"Last Election EVER" - Elon Musk vs Mark Cuban: Billionaires BATTLE Over Dangers If Trump Loses 2024


Editorial
See other Editorial Articles

Title: For Whom The Bell Curve Tolls
Source: The Political Cesspool
URL Source: http://www.thepoliticalcesspool.org ... for-whom-the-bell-curve-tolls/
Published: Jun 9, 2008
Author: James Edwards
Post Date: 2008-06-11 13:03:26 by X-15
Keywords: None
Views: 108
Comments: 6

This country has gone completely insane. In Houston, Texas, a high school of 2500 students is being shut down because a few black students can’t learn math. No exaggeration; you can read about it here.

The closure of Sam Houston High School boiled down to math.

Officials with the Houston Independent School District say they tried to solve the problem — spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to fix it — but for five straight years, Sam Houston could not get a small group of black students to pass the state-mandated math exam.

Now, after state Education Commissioner Robert Scott forced the predominantly Hispanic school to close Thursday, some are criticizing Texas’ accountability system as too harsh — mandating drastic action based on a few students. Others say the blame lies with HISD for letting the poor performance continue.

This year, only 29 percent of the black students at Sam Houston passed the math portion of the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills. Half the Hispanic students passed, which would have been just good enough to qualify for the state’s acceptable rating, if not for the black students’ passing rate.

“In one sense, closing the whole school is a very heavy-handed response,” said Ed Fuller, an education researcher at the University of Texas at Austin. “But then again, you have this five-year track record of poor math performance.”

Of the 2500 students at Sam Houston, about 110 are black. There are about 65 white kids, and the rest are Hispanic. Not that the scores of the Hispanic kids are anything to write home about; they’re not. But to shut down an entire high school because 3% of the class can’t cut it is beyond insane. They’ve already spent “hundreds of thousands of dollars” trying to raise the black math scores, to no avail. Now they’re going to spend hundreds of thousands more to farm out 2500 kids to a bunch of other already overcrowded schools, all in the name of Equality. If a black kid can’t grasp the material, it can’t be his fault, because we’re all equal. It has to be the fault of the school. Even though they’ve tried everything they know to do to raise the black math scores:

The school also adopted a new computerized math program called Agile Mind and worked with consultants from the respected Charles A. Dana Center at the University of Texas at Austin.

Still, only 17 of the 59 black students tested — or 29 percent — passed the math exam this year. That’s up slightly from 24 percent last year.

Here’s a black “expert” who has a New Plan to get those black scores up:

Valerie Hill-Jackson, an assistant education professor at Texas A&M University, said teachers need to learn how to connect with black students.

“We know this is a culture that is very vibrant, exuberant, likes to talk,” said Hill-Jackson, who is black. “So, if I’m a math and science teacher, how can I use that to my advantage? I can have them get out of their seats.”

Ask not for whom The Bell Curve tolls, America; it tolls for thee.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: X-15, *Race Realism* (#0)

But to shut down an entire high school because 3% of the class can’t cut it is beyond insane.

On the other hand, removing the 3% might lift the scores of the 97%.

Keisha Brown, 21, from Chicago, whose mother has a nightgown with a picture of Obama on it, said, “Everything will be different now.”

Tauzero  posted on  2008-06-11   13:14:44 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: X-15 (#0)

This is what happens when liberals - yes, it's liberals who peddled this crap - take social engineering to the extreme and want not only equal access to opportunities but also equal outcomes. And when equal outcomes do not happen everyone must suffer.

The other thing that liberals peddled was the fact that everyone has the right to get a college education come hell or high water. Only a small percentage of the general population has the intellectual equipment to be scholars! But hey - this is now a right - and now every dumb bunny be they black, white, brown - attends college and so colleges have lowered their standards and now the bachelor's, masters programs have no value. A PhD or a post graduate professional degree are the only degrees that have retained their currency. But affirmative action with its gender and race preferences will soon ruin those degrees too.

scrapper2  posted on  2008-06-11   13:20:44 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: X-15 (#0)

Valerie Hill-Jackson, an assistant education professor at Texas A&M University, said teachers need to learn how to connect with black students.

Connect???

A 2X4 would be a good starter.

Cynicom  posted on  2008-06-11   13:22:46 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: scrapper2 (#2) (Edited)

The other thing that liberals peddled was the fact that everyone has the right to get a college education come hell or high water. Only a small percentage of the general population has the intellectual equipment to be scholars! But hey - this is now a right - and now every dumb bunny be they black, white, brown - attends college and so colleges have lowered their standards and now the bachelor's, masters programs have no value.

College curricula today look like grade school or junior high curricula from the 50's or 60's. Many community colleges, and even state universities have remedial reading and writing courses.

Rupert_Pupkin  posted on  2008-06-11   13:31:49 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: X-15, good holy lord (#0)

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/5824088.html

The closure of Sam Houston High School boiled down to math.

Officials with the Houston Independent School District say they tried to solve the problem — spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to fix it — but for five straight years, Sam Houston could not get a small group of black students to pass the state-mandated math exam.

Now, after state Education Commissioner Robert Scott forced the predominantly Hispanic school to close Thursday, some are criticizing Texas' accountability system as too harsh — mandating drastic action based on a few students. Others say the blame lies with HISD for letting the poor performance continue.

This year, only 29 percent of the black students at Sam Houston passed the math portion of the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills. Half the Hispanic students passed, which would have been just good enough to qualify for the state's acceptable rating, if not for the black students' passing rate.

"In one sense, closing the whole school is a very heavy-handed response," said Ed Fuller, an education researcher at the University of Texas at Austin. "But then again, you have this five-year track record of poor math performance."

Numbers behind the scores

Among Sam Houston's 2,500 or so students, only about 110 are black. Most of the others are Hispanic, and about 65 white students attend.

For school officials, talking about the performance of one student group is tough, and raising test scores can be tougher.

"You have to be very careful with singling out groups of kids at the high school level," said Kelly Trlica, HISD's assistant superintendent over secondary curriculum and instruction. "Any group of students, to sort of single them out, is hard socially," she said

HISD might have another chance with Sam Houston, though. Commissioner Scott has said the district can submit a plan to reopen the school in the fall with a new principal, mostly new teachers, some new students, a different academic program and a fresh name.

As district leaders craft that plan, due to the school board Thursday, some are warning district leaders to learn from their mistakes.

"People of other races always feel like they have the best solution for the teaching and learning of African-American students when they don't even understand the total concept of African-American culture and the environment which these young people of today live in," said Carol Mims Galloway, a Houston school board member and president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in Houston.

Valerie Hill-Jackson, an assistant education professor at Texas A&M University, said teachers need to learn how to connect with black students.

"We know this is a culture that is very vibrant, exuberant, likes to talk," said Hill-Jackson, who is black. "So, if I'm a math and science teacher, how can I use that to my advantage? I can have them get out of their seats."

Julia Guajardo, Sam Houston's executive principal, and Trlica said school officials made serious efforts to boost the test scores of all students, no matter their race. Teachers assessed which students were having difficulty with the same math concepts and then tutored them in small groups.

Working on a solution

The school also adopted a new computerized math program called Agile Mind and worked with consultants from the respected Charles A. Dana Center at the University of Texas at Austin.

Still, only 17 of the 59 black students tested — or 29 percent — passed the math exam this year. That's up slightly from 24 percent last year.

The passing rate of Hispanic students increased from 46 percent to 51 percent.

Gloria White, managing director of the Dana Center, characterized the math gains at Sam Houston as "small forward progress." She emphasized that a major turnaround takes at least three years and that consultants only started working with Sam Houston teachers last year.

"You need collaboration time with the teachers," White said. "It's a process. It's not an event. Sometimes you see some movement in the first year, but it's not anything you can count on."

'Antiquated' system

Superintendent Abelardo Saavedra, when he announced the news of Sam Houston's closure Thursday, called the state's accountability system "antiquated," in part because it doesn't take into account the progress made by schools.

On the language arts test this year, for example, the passing rates of black students at Sam Houston jumped 17 points to 84 percent.

Marina Mendoza, the president of the parent group at Sam Houston, said she was shocked to hear some people, who weren't aware of the problems with black students' scores, suggest the campus performed poorly because of illegal immigrants at the school.

"I thought that was so unfair," said Mendoza, who has two children at the school. "We should never look at this as a racial problem. It's an educational problem."

ericka.mellon@chron.com

Jethro Tull  posted on  2008-06-11   13:41:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: All (#5)

Valerie Hill-Jackson, an assistant education professor at Texas A&M University, said teachers need to learn how to connect with black students.

Valerie Hill-Jackson, Students Honored For Community Service

2/9/07

By Lauren Rouse

Professor Valerie Hill-Jackson and several preservice students from her spring 2006 multicultural education course were honored Jan. 30 at the Sixth Annual Appreciation Banquet given by the African American National Heritage Society for their community service. Students served the Brazos Valley African American Museum by researching grant opportunities, setting up administration offices and creating portable learning trunks that can be checked out of the museum by any school district or organization.

"Several overarching principles guided my multicultural education class, with the concept of knowing and serving the community as my chief vision," Hill- Jackson said. "It only made sense, then, that the Lohman Community of Learners would rise to the occasion and serve the community through the learning trunk project."

The learning trunks include items such as lesson plans, hands-on devices, video links, Power point visuals and research binders themed around issues relevant to the African American experience in Texas and the United States.

At the banquet, Hill-Jackson accepted a proclamation of service from Bryan Mayor Ernie Wentrcek on the students' behalf.

"The Lohman Community of Learners have exceeded my expectations with their service," Mel Pruitt, CEO and founder of the Brazos Valley African American Museum, said. "If they keep their enthusiasm and care for the community, they all will be successful teachers."

QUICK LINKS

Faculty Employment Opportunities

Clinical Assistant Professor ESL - Dr. Edie Cassell

Clinical Assistant Professor Reading/Literacy Education - Dr. Lori Graham

Jethro Tull  posted on  2008-06-11   13:45:48 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]